This is confusing because of the word "cant" and then "cm squared". Why would you tell someone a wrong unit?
What do you mean "volume may change, but the measurement of them won't?" If the volume changes, the measurement definitely will. On the other hand, one can have a fixed volume but express it in different units such as CUBIC centimeters or CUBIC millimeters. In that case, the numerical part of the measurement expression will change, but the meaning of the measurement won't.
3.000 liters = 3000 cubic centimeters = 3 000 000 cubic millimeters - all the same volume but different expressions
A proper measurement must have both a number AND a unit.
litre
Added:
Volume of liquids, solids AND gases are in SI-unit cubic metre, m3
More usable in household is Litre (L), 1 L = 1 dm3 = 0.001 m3
and millilitre (mL), 1 mL = 1 cm3 = 0.001 dm3 = 0.000001 m3
Liters. The volume may change, but the measurement of them won't. You cant also use cm squared or millimeters squared.
Centimeter cube,Decimeter cube or Meter cube.
Generally cubic meters for solids and cubic centimeters ("cc's") for liquids and gases.
Kelvin is the official SI base unit for temperature.
The SI unit is the cubic metre.
Litres and steres are used for volume.
Liters
Structure. Solids have definite shape and definite volume. Liquids have definite volume but indefinite shape. Gases have both indefinite shape and indefinite volume.
solids and liquids
Liquids, like solids have a definite volume. While liquids don't have a definite shape, they can take the shape of a container which can be measured the same way as with solids.
- solids have a shape and a volume- liquids have a volume but not a shape- gases haven't shape or volume (in free form)
No liquids and solids do not change size the volume, mass,density, and weight stay the same they just change shape.
solids and liquids
solids and liquids
Structure. Solids have definite shape and definite volume. Liquids have definite volume but indefinite shape. Gases have both indefinite shape and indefinite volume.
Solids have a set volume. Liquids have a set volume. Gases do not have a set volume. Why? Solids are solids. They don't move. They're in a 'frozen state' as is. Liquids 'mold' to the shape of their container and they stay there. Gases are free to go anywhere. Always moving and 'flying.'
idnk
Both have a fixed volume.
solids and liquids
Unlike solids and liquids, a gas will expand to fill the space available to it.
Yes. Solids have shapes and volume. Liquids take they're own shape and gas spreads.
defined volume.
Solids are usually more dense because solids have a smaller volume than liquids or gases, so the same amount of mass is in a smaller volume, making the density greater.