Take 9.3 and multiply it by 4 to get the weight of one case, that is 37.2 pounds. Then multiply 37.2 by 27, to get the total weight, which is 1004.4 pounds.
Well...a standard case of wine has 12 (or a dozen) bottles, so 10 cases would be 10 dozen bottles of wine. Was this a trick question? There are some wines that come packed in cases of 6, so there would be a half-dozen in each of those.
Each 750ml bottle has about four glasses of wine. 20 bottles would give one glass to each person- so a reasonable host should probably get 40 bottles so each guest enjoys the gathering without getting intoxicated.
Figure out how many oz. are in both the bottle of water and a gallon. Then see how many bottles of water you can fit in a gallon. Theres your answer.
You will get six glasses per bottle. You will get more from non-standard size bottles. A Magnum equals two regular 750 ml bottles; a Jeroboam equals four; a Rehoboam equals six; a Methuselah equals eight; a Salmanazar equals 12; a Balthazar equals 16; and a Nebuchadnezzar equals 20 regular bottles of Champagne.
it's 0! and i am sure about that!
Near as we can figure, mostly hydrogen.
if you get ten bottles, that's only three glasses per guest. so a lot would be needed!
About 20. A "regular" wine or champagne bottle is 750 ml, which is a bit over 25 ounces, and a typical "toasting" -sized pour is about 5 ounces, so figure five servings per bottle.
some organisms produce hydrogen peroxide as a result of respiration. accumulation of this could be toxic to the cell therefore catalase is used to degrade it into less harmful compounds like water and gaseous oxygen
well hydrogen does not get along with a lot of families. Go look on other websites to figure out more!!
Hydrogen. Actually the figure is closer to73.46% hydrogen. 24.85% is helium.
I don't know I am trying to figure it out