For domestic use, in litres or pints depending on your country.
In kilograms of milk solids if you're running a milk powder factory.
liters or milliliters or cups.
Milk is measured by volume. It is not measured by weight.
I won't. I don't use milk.
No. Kilograms are used to measure mass. Liters (and variations of liters, i.e. mL) are used to measure volume.
The volume of a glass of milk would best be measured in millilitres.
Volume of cup ca be measured in milliliter. It can also be measured in decimal liter.
You need to measure the mass using appropriate equipment. You can measure the volume of a textbook and a container of milk by measuring its linear dimensions and calculating the volume. It is not at all easy to measure the volume of an air balloon. You cannot use displacement of a fluid (water) because when submerged, the balloon would be experiencing water pressure and so would occupy a smaller volume. You cannot measure it by allowing the air to escape and measure that volume of air because that air will no longer be experiencing the pressure exerted by the material (rubber?) of the balloon. I have no answer to this part. Once you have the mass and volume, the density is merely mass/volume.
Well, to determine the density of anything, you'd simply have to measure the volume and the mass. Then, you would divide VOLUME / MASS or, if the mass is smaller, MASS / VOLUME. And there is your density.That formula(rule) goes for anything you need to know the density of, not just a simple glass of milk.I hope that helped and you can ask more about how to measure the volume and mass, too.(Mass: Weigh it in GRAMS.)(Volume: Length X Width X Heighth)
A litre (or liter) is a measure of volume, not a measure of weight. A single liter of milk weighs ABOUT 1.03 kilograms.
To find the volume of milk, you can use a measuring cup or a graduated cylinder, both of which are designed to measure liquid volumes accurately. For larger quantities, a kitchen scale can also be used by measuring the weight of the milk and converting it to volume using the density of milk (approximately 1.03 g/mL). If you're measuring in a recipe, a standard measuring jug would suffice for most household purposes.
To find the density of milk, first measure the mass of a given volume of milk using a scale. Then, divide the mass by the volume to calculate the density (density = mass/volume). Keep in mind that milk's density can vary depending on factors like its fat content.
You would use the measurement of volume (mm3, cm3) it is pronounced 'cubed', as in 'squared'.