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The best unit of capacity to describe the amount of lemonade in a pitcher is liters or quarts, depending on the size of the pitcher. For example, if the pitcher holds 2 liters of lemonade, you would state that the capacity is 2 liters. To determine this, you can fill the pitcher with a known volume of water (like a liter measuring cup) and count how many times it fills the pitcher to find its total capacity. This approach provides a practical way to measure the volume of liquid accurately.
Oh, what a lovely question! If we have 3 liters of lemonade, that's the same as 3000 ml. If each bottle is 250 ml, we can fill 12 bottles with that refreshing lemonade. Just imagine all the joy and happiness those bottles will bring to others!
The weight of the bottle with the water minus the mass of bottle gives the weight of the water present.Mass/Volume=Density,therefore weight of the water/density gives the volume of water present in the bottle which is nothing but the volume of the bottle itself.
To convert liters to bottles, you need to know the volume of one bottle. Then, divide the total volume in liters by the volume of one bottle to get the number of bottles. For example, if one bottle is 0.5 liters and you have 10 liters, you would have 10 / 0.5 = 20 bottles.
1 liter = 1000 milliliters 5 glasses @150ml = 750 ml 1000-750=250 ml left in the bottle.
To determine how many 35ml "nips" are in a 70cl bottle, you first need to convert the volume to the same unit of measurement. There are 1000ml in 1 liter, so a 70cl bottle is equivalent to 700ml. Then, you divide the total volume of the bottle (700ml) by the volume of each "nip" (35ml) to find the answer. In this case, 700ml divided by 35ml equals 20 nips in a 70cl bottle.
40% of 750ml = (40/100) * 750 = 300 mL.
"The Lemonade Crime" by Jacqueline Davies has a total of 160 pages.
The amount of citric acid in lemonade can vary depending on the recipe, but typically ranges from about 0.3% to 0.5% of the total volume of the drink. Commercially produced lemonades may contain a higher or lower amount of citric acid depending on the brand and formulation.
A standard bottle cap typically holds about 5 to 10 milliliters (ml) of liquid, depending on the design. Therefore, in a 2-liter bottle, the cap would contain a small fraction of the total volume, specifically around 0.25% to 0.5% of the total capacity.
280 grams. The Law of Conservation of Mass
First, we need to find the mass of the liquid by subtracting the mass of the empty bottle from the total mass. The mass of the liquid is 5.760g - 4.570g = 1.190g. The density of the liquid is then calculated by dividing the mass of the liquid by its volume: 1.190g / 3.360mL ≈ 0.354 g/mL.