Cubic metres are a measure of volume.
The tonne is a measure of mass.
One cubic meter of water has 1,000 liters of water at 1 kg per liter as sea level. Rock has a density the varies to water. A bank cubic meter of water is 1 tonne.
Sorry, you can only convert 1 metric ton of water to cubic meters (not square meters). Square meters are an area and cubic meters are a volume.
Cubic meter is a measurement of volume, and metric ton is a measurement of weight.
A metric ton is equal to 1000 kilograms, which is a weight measurement. Cubic meter is a volume measurement. One cubic meter is equal to 1000 kg.
The mass of a cubic meter of water is approximately 1 metric ton. This is because the density of water is about 1,000 kilograms per cubic meter, and since 1 metric ton equals 1,000 kilograms, a cubic meter of water weighs 1 metric ton.
To convert 1 cubic meter to 1 ton, you need to know the density of the material. The density of the material will determine the mass (weight) of the 1 cubic meter. Once you have the density, you can use the formula: mass (in tons) = volume (in cubic meters) x density (in tons per cubic meter) to get the conversion.
1 liter of water has nominally 1 kilogram of mass.1 metric ton = 1,000 kilograms1 cubic meter = 1,000 litersSo 1 cubic meter of water would be 1 metric ton of mass.
Cubic meters measure volume, tons measure either mass or weight (depending on whether you mean metric tons or US tons). You can't convert between the two without specifying a material. One cubic meter of water has a mass of just about one metric ton (which weighs almost the same as a US long ton).
A cubic meter is a unit of volume; a metric ton is a measure of mass. Depending on what is in a particular cubic meter, the mass may vary between close to zero (in a vacuum), and billions of tons (in a neutron star). For example, a cubic meter of water has a mass of 1 ton, a cubic meter of lead, about 11 tons, a cubic meter of gold, about 19 tons. In every case, you have to multiply the volume with the density of whatever fills the cubic meter.A cubic meter is a unit of volume; a metric ton is a measure of mass. Depending on what is in a particular cubic meter, the mass may vary between close to zero (in a vacuum), and billions of tons (in a neutron star). For example, a cubic meter of water has a mass of 1 ton, a cubic meter of lead, about 11 tons, a cubic meter of gold, about 19 tons. In every case, you have to multiply the volume with the density of whatever fills the cubic meter.A cubic meter is a unit of volume; a metric ton is a measure of mass. Depending on what is in a particular cubic meter, the mass may vary between close to zero (in a vacuum), and billions of tons (in a neutron star). For example, a cubic meter of water has a mass of 1 ton, a cubic meter of lead, about 11 tons, a cubic meter of gold, about 19 tons. In every case, you have to multiply the volume with the density of whatever fills the cubic meter.A cubic meter is a unit of volume; a metric ton is a measure of mass. Depending on what is in a particular cubic meter, the mass may vary between close to zero (in a vacuum), and billions of tons (in a neutron star). For example, a cubic meter of water has a mass of 1 ton, a cubic meter of lead, about 11 tons, a cubic meter of gold, about 19 tons. In every case, you have to multiply the volume with the density of whatever fills the cubic meter.
I think they are the same.
The answer is 1,672 tonne (metric ton).
1 metric ton = 1,000 kilograms How much volume (space) it occupies depends on what substance it is.
-- 1 cubic meter of space is 1,000 liters of space. -- 1 liter of water has 1 kilogram of mass. -- 1,000 liters of water has 1,000 kilograms of mass = 1 metric ton -- 1 metric ton of water fills 1 cubic meter of space. -- A substance with a specific gravity of 2.7 packs 2.7 times as much mass into the same space. -- 2.7 metric tons of it pack into 1 cubic meter of space. -- The number of cubic meters it occupies is (the number of metric tons)/2.7 . -- For ANY substance, the number of cubic meters it fills is (the # of metric tons)/(specific gravity) .