The units for volume are generally the cube of some unit of length - for instance, cubic meters, cubic kilometers, cubic light-years, cubic femtometers, etc.However, there are also units of volume that are not derived from the cube of a length - for example, the gallon, the fluid ounce, or tablespoons.
The prefix for volume is "milli-" which represents one thousandth of the base unit.
Yes. There is no SI fundamental unit for volume, so any volume unit is derived.
No, cubic cm is a unit of volume, not area. It represents the volume of a cube with sides that are each one centimeter in length. Area is measured in square units, while volume is measured in cubic units.
Assume the value is 56mm³. Since cubic length unit represents the volume, the volume of 56mm³ is actually itself.
Ml stands for milliliters, a unit of volume commonly used to measure liquids. It represents one-thousandth of a liter. When something is in milliliters, it means it is a measurement of its volume in that unit.
A unit of volume with dimensions 1 unit x 1 unit x 1 unit is called a cubic unit. It represents the volume of a cube where each side measures 1 unit. In the metric system, this unit is commonly referred to as a cubic centimeter (cm^3), while in the imperial system, it is often called a cubic inch (in^3). Cubic units are used to measure the volume of three-dimensional objects.
The "I" in chemistry probably refers to the element iodine.
472 kg is a unit of mass. It represents the amount of matter in an object, while volume measures the amount of space an object occupies.
Litre for very large volumes, Hectolitre
The quantity of a gas is typically measured in moles, which is a unit of measurement that represents the amount of a substance. Another common unit for measuring the quantity of a gas is liters, which represents the volume of the gas.
volume per mass or volume/mass. Ummm can anyone check up the word rho i think that is the unit!!!
No, density is not a vector quantity. It is a scalar quantity that represents the mass of a substance per unit volume.