Gallon is already a volume measurement, so it appears you have answered your own question.
3volumes is in a gallon of milk you see the concept is to introduct it so their is you answer!
There are 128 fluid ounces in a gallon of milk. One gallon equals approximately 3.78 liters.
Milk comes in many different sized containers: 8 ounce, pint, quart, liter, half gallon, gallon, etc.
Milk is packaged in different size containers. Usually litres or its multiples. Some places still use the old Imperial measures in which case it would be pints and its multiples.
Its wrong
A gallon of milk. There has been no change in the volume of a gallon since 1966.
3785.41178 ml
Though they have same volume,they have different masses.
(Is that a question? That is a statement.) A gallon is a measure of volume, of how much space the fluid occupies. 1 gallon of milk has the same volume as 1 gallon of orange juice. They occupies the same amount of space. Different fluids have different densities. Density is how much mass occupies a given volume. If the density of one fluid is greater, it has more mass, and it weighs more. A gallon is a gallon.
16, 2, or 1?
16, 2, or 1?
The typical units of measurement used to determine the volume of a milk carton are gallon and half gallon. If the carton is smaller, pints, quarts or ounces are used.
A gallon is a measure of volume. To determine the mass in grams of a gallon of milk, you must know the volume and density.A gallon of 2% milk is 3.78L. The density of 2% milk is 1035.55g/L.Unknown:mass in gramsKnown:volume = 3.78Ldensity = 1035.55g/LBasic Equation:density = mass/volumeSolution:mass = density x volume = 1035.55g/L x 3.78L = 3910g (rounded to three significant figures)3910g = 3.910kg = 8.60 pounds
3 pounds---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Pound is a unit of mass and gallon is a unit of volume !But considering the density of milk approx. 1 g/cm3 and an US gallon the mass is 8,67 pounds.
The volume of a container does not provide information about its shape and therefore about its surface area.
The density of various forms of cow's milk ranges between 1.033 and 1.036 kg/L. The volume has nothing to do with the density. A drop, a glass, a gallon, and a tanker truckload of milk all have the same density.
Milk sells by the gallon.