Water
Water because a liter is a measurement of space and not mass. Water occupying 1 liter of space is lots heavier than air occupying 1 liter of space. <><><><><> It depends on density. It is possible, given enough pressure, to have one liter of air weigh more than one liter of water.
Water presents a much higher resistance than air.
1 liter
The answer is 370,28 L.
1 Liter of water = 1 KG of water 1 liter of air = practically weightless Liter is m3 (mass) where Kg is weight
all of it - the air would expand to fit the entire container.
-- the area of the exposed surface -- the airflow over the exposed surface -- the temperature of the liter of water -- the air pressure at the exposed surface -- the relative humidity of the air in the room -- the transparency of the liter container are all relevant to the rate of evaporation.
Approx 180ml
One liter of air at 101.325 equals on liter of air at 101.325. It is a trick question of sorts, because the metric unit of measurement "liter" is defined by said amount of matter in an atmosphere of 101.325 KPa.
not at all. water is by far more dense therefore liter per liter, its way heavier. erosion happpens when partices are rubbed off an object, changing its shape. because water is much heavier than air. frictional force due to the mass of water will do much more erosion to an object
none there can not be air in water