If the diameter of the sphere is 6 cm then the volume is: 113.1 cc
10cc 10cc you can't cm is a length, cc is a volume
Density = Mass/Volume = 9g/2cc = 4.5 g per cc.
The question, as presented, is total nonsense since volume cannot be measured i cm. A centimetre is a measure of distance, not volume. The appropriate measure for volume is cubic centimetres or cc. Density = Mass/Volume = 36 g/12 cc = 3 grams per cc.
That's a unit of volume. cc (cubic centimeters) is the same as milliliter. If you want to convert that to liters, you can divide by 1000.
CC stands for Centimeters Cubed it is the total volume of each engine cylinder multiplied by the total number of cylinders in the engine. As a result larger engines will have a higher CC value.
cc
cc is a volume, mm is a length. You can't have a volume in a length
CC stands for Carsten Charles.
The CC in Volkswagen CC stands for "Comfort Coupe".
Cubic Centimeters
volume of prostrate 35.6 cc = how much in gms
If the diameter of the sphere is 6 cm then the volume is: 113.1 cc
Cubic Centimeters (referring to the engine displacement, ie the engine size). Specifically, the volume of the cylinder or cylinders.
1 cc has the volume of a millilitre
CC is Cubic Centimeters, an unit of volume by itself. It can be either swept or total volume depending on circumstances.
A volume of 25 milliliters is the same as a volume of 0.8454 fluid ounces.