It all depends upon the density of the substance.
For 1 Kg of Mercury, with a density of 13534 Kg/m3 it will occupy a volume of about 0.0000739 m3.
For 1 Kg of Hydrogen with a density of 0.0899 kg/m3 it will occupy a volume of about 11.12 m3.
1 gram = 0.001 kilogram 1 centimetre =0.01 metre so that 1 cm3 = 0.000001 m3 Therefore, 1 gram per cm3 = 0.001 kg per 0.000001 m3 = 1000 kg/m3. So to convert from gram per cubic centimetre to kilogram per cubic metre, multiply by 1000.
1 gram/centimeter3 (g/cm3) equals 1000 kilogram/meter3 (kg/m3)
There are 1000 liters in 1 m3.
0.1 m3
1 m = 100 cm So 1 m3 = 100*100*100 cm3 = 106 cm3 and 10 m3 = 107 cm3
g / cm3 * 1000 = kg / m3
To answer this you need to find out the mass of 1m (or 1 dm) of nitrogen.
Density of ice is 917 kg/m3 Volume is mass/density is (1kg)/(917 kg/m3)=1.09x10-3m3 and 1 litre=1m3 then 1 kilogram of ice is 1.09x10-3 litres.
A kilogram of butter as it is less dense than lead.
1 m3 x 1000000 cm3/1 m3 x 2.75g/cm3 x 1 kg/1000g = 2750 kg
1 kilogram per liter 1000 kilogram per m3 1 gram per milliliter
Not directly. A meter is a measure of length while a kilogram is a measure of mass. Although, you can work out the weight (kg) of a quantity of a substance by multiplying the volume of the substance (m3) by the density of the substance (kg/m3).
well the density of concrete can vary from 2200kg/m3-2800kg/m3 but 2400kg/m3 is the most common
1 gram = 0.001 kilogram 1 centimetre =0.01 metre so that 1 cm3 = 0.000001 m3 Therefore, 1 gram per cm3 = 0.001 kg per 0.000001 m3 = 1000 kg/m3. So to convert from gram per cubic centimetre to kilogram per cubic metre, multiply by 1000.
Density: kilogram / cubic meter = kg / m3 = kg.m-3
The volume is(1000)/(density of cement in kg/m3) cubic meters.
1000000