"The volume of 50 mg solid which occupies a volume of 0.00064 litres?" it is not a question.
To relate mass (milligrams) to volume (litres), you need to know the density (mass/volume) of the substance.
The volume of any solid object is the space it occupies.
volume
That's a description of the volume of a solid. The volume of an object is the amount of 3-dimentional space that object occupies.
It is volume.
Its volume.
The measure of the amount of space a solid figure is Volume
The measure of the amount of space a solid figure is Volume
The Unit for volume is the same. Volume is usually measured in Litres. For larger volumes cubic metres can be used: 1 m³ = 1000 Litres.
Either litres or cubic metres.
No, actually. Volume is how much three-dimensional space that a solid, liquid, gas, plasma, or even a shape occupies.
A liquid has no definite shape but a definite volume, a solid has a definite volume and a definite volume, and a gas has no definite shape or volume.
litres cubic metres