No, water cannot form a black hole, no matter the quantity. Black holes are only formed after the collapse of a supergiant star.
Water has about a 4% rate of expansion when frozen. Therefore, one cubic foot of water would increase to about 1.04 cubic feet when frozen.
180/62.5 = 2.88 cubic feet
Grams and cubic centimeters are interchangeable. 100g of water = 100cm3 of water.
depends on of what you;re tryin to determine the volume of... For water it would generally be measured in cubic litres, for air it would be cubic millimetres,centimetres, metres and or kilometres
7,500 gallons of water equates to 1,002.604 cubic feet. This much water would have a weight of about 62,625 pounds.
It would not accelerate because it does not go straight in.As it turns out ,nothing does.Everything that goes in spirals in , like water going down a drain. If space time is the tub or sink ,the black hole is the drain and the matter (in this case light)is the water,the water spirales in.It would look to an outside observer like the light is turning red. This is because it decelerates.If light sped up it would be able to escape the black hole and we would see the black hole and it would not be a black hole.
One cubic centimeter of water would fit into that cup, and it would weigh 1 gram.
a tank of ful of water that has a volume of 3.252 cubic metres would have a mass of?
Water has about a 4% rate of expansion when frozen. Therefore, one cubic foot of water would increase to about 1.04 cubic feet when frozen.
Assuming your measurements are in feet, this volume would contain 6,272,640 cubic feet of water.
It's not water .____.
180/62.5 = 2.88 cubic feet
taking the normal density of water as 1g/cc, the amount of water in 1 cubic inch would be 16.387064 grams. Addition about 1 cubic inch.
I'm assuming water -- then you would have 748.05 gallons of water in 100 cubic foot volume.
Just the liquid itself would occupy about 0.1605 cubic feet.
7.518 gallons.
Quite possibly 512 cubic inches!