1000 litres is, by definition equal to a cubic metre. As a result, 1 ml = 1 cm3. It isa consequence of the definition of a litre.
1 gm = 1cm3 = 1ml
1 cm3 = 1mL 1000ml per Litre Therefore 1000cm3 per Litre
The same way you determine the density of any other object. Divide the mass by the volume. Add: density = mass/volume = 5g/1mL = 5g/mL = 5g/cm3* *1mL = 1 cm3
12 cm3 (because 1 cm3 equals 1 milliliter
No. Mostly yes, but... 1 cc = 1 cm3 and 1 cm3 of water has a mass of 1 gram - NOT weight, which depends on the force of gravity. 1 litre = 1000 cc. So 1 L of water has a mass of 1 kg.
Yes. They're equal volumes.
1 gm = 1cm3 = 1ml
1 cm3 = 1mL 1000ml per Litre Therefore 1000cm3 per Litre
These measure different types of units, however 1 cm3 = 1ml. 1 cm3 = 1cc.
They are of equal volume; 1cc = 1cm3 = 1mL
Multiply by ' 1 ' to convert either unit to the other. They're identical volumes.
1 mL - A cc (cubic centimeter, cm3) and a mL (milliliter) are equal to each other in terms of volume.
1 centicube is 1 cm3.
1 cm3 = 0.000001 m3 I.e. because there are 100cm in 1m then 1m3 = (100^3)cm3 or 1cm3 = (1/ 1000000) = 1 x 10^(-6) = 1 micro
1ml is 1/5 of a standard US teaspoon.
1cc (cubic centimeter) and 1mL (milliliter) are the same volume.
The same way you determine the density of any other object. Divide the mass by the volume. Add: density = mass/volume = 5g/1mL = 5g/mL = 5g/cm3* *1mL = 1 cm3