The base unit of volume is liter. (L)
My honors Physics teacher told us that the base unit of Volume is cubic meter (m3)
liter
The liter is a unit of volume, but it is only tolerated, it is not part of SI.
The basic unit of volume in SI is the metric cube (m3).
1 m3 = 1 000 L
Since meter is the unit of length, the unit of volume is the cubic meter, m3.
Since meter is the unit of length, the unit of volume is the cubic meter, m3.
Since meter is the unit of length, the unit of volume is the cubic meter, m3.
Since meter is the unit of length, the unit of volume is the cubic meter, m3.
That depends on the system of units you are using. In the imperial system it is the pint or the gallon. In the metric system it is the litre.
The Gallon. MORE INFO from another contributor :- the first answer only applies to FLUIDS. For SOLIDS, the answer is Cubic Feet, Cubic Inches, and Cubiic Yards
Volume is a derived unit, in the SI system it is the cubic metre.
Since meter is the unit of length, the unit of volume is the cubic meter, m3.
The cubic meter.
A litre.
The basic unit of volume is the cubic metre. In everyday use, the litre is more common.
If, by 'metric system', you mean the 'SI system', then there is no base unit for volume. The unit for volume is called a 'derived unit', and it is the cubic metre (m3).
the base unit of volume in the mtric system is litres and cm ^3
There is no unit of measure, and no mechanical device, that can describe or measure both mass and volume.
This is volume of the Universe ! As an unit of measure the cubic metre and multiples.
Liter because it's the base unit of volume
The basic unit of volume is the cubic metre. In everyday use, the litre is more common.
The measurement is cubic meters.
there are many unit which measure volume .SI units that measure volume is cubic meter .
The basic SI unit is for length. Volume is a measure which is based on length-cubed and so it is a derived (not complex) unit.
If, by 'metric system', you mean the 'SI system', then there is no base unit for volume. The unit for volume is called a 'derived unit', and it is the cubic metre (m3).
No. Beakers measure liquid volume. Millimeters is not a unit of volume, and especially not a unit of liquid volume. Beakers usually measure in a fraction of a liter, such as a milliliter.
the base unit of volume in the mtric system is litres and cm ^3
The meter is the metric base unit for volume, and the cubic meter is the derived unit.
There is no unit of measure, and no mechanical device, that can describe or measure both mass and volume.
This is volume of the Universe ! As an unit of measure the cubic metre and multiples.
Any metric measure of volume.