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1 gal
100 Kilos
a graduated cylinder
2000 ml
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.
1000 g of water
You can have various items with capacity of 1 liter. You can have a jug or bottle with 1 liter capacity.
100 Kilos
a graduated cylinder
4 liters
That depends entirely - on the capacity of the bottle !
It rather depends on the size of the bottle. For instance, a one litre capacity bottle will hold one litre of liquid.
Depends what is is filled with. Water? Sand? Rice?
The liter is commonly used. For a small bottle, milliliters might also be used.
What capacity would you like? I all depends upon the cross sectional area of the bottle (along with the shape of the bottle).For example, assuming a cylindrical bottle:if the bottle has a cross sectional area of 1 in² then its capacity is 8 cubic inches (about 130 ml);If the bottle has a cross sectional areas of 3 13/16 in² = 3.8125 in² then its capacity is 30.5 cubic inches (about 500 ml or ½ litre);if the bottle has a cross sectional area of 7 5/8 in² = 7.625 in² then its capacity is 61 cubic inches (about 1 litre).
Capacity is the space inside something (that is hollow). Volume is the space something occupies. The capacity of a bottle is the amount of space inside the bottle, whereas the volume of the bottle is the space that the bottle occupies. The difference between the two is the volume of the material from which the bottle is made.
There are several ways you could determine the capacity of a milk jug: 1: Fill the milk jug with water and then transfer the water to a graduated measuring jug 2: take a bottle of known volume such as a soda bottle. Fill the soda bottle and transfer its contents to the milk jug to get its approximate capacity 3: weigh the empty milk jug and make a note of the weight. Then, fill the milk jug with water. 1 cubic cm of water weighs 1 gram. Deduct the weight of the empty jug from the weight of the full jug to give the weight of the water inside. If, for example, the water weighs approximately 1000 grams then you have a 1 litre milk jug
Air has only a limited capacity to carry water vapour, this capacity diminishes as the air gets colder. When this happens, the water vapour will condense out, at first as a fine mist.