Water
Water because a liter is a measurement of space and not mass. Water occupying 1 liter of space is lots heavier than air occupying 1 liter of space. <><><><><> It depends on density. It is possible, given enough pressure, to have one liter of air weigh more than one liter of water.
A liter bottle can hold approximately 1 liter of air.
1 liter
A 1.5 liter plastic bottle contains approximately 1.5 liters (1500 milliliters) of air when empty. When you fill the bottle with water, the volume of air contained within the bottle will vary depending on the amount of water you add.
The answer is 370,28 L.
1 Liter of water = 1 KG of water 1 liter of air = practically weightless Liter is m3 (mass) where Kg is weight
all of it - the air would expand to fit the entire container.
Approx 180ml
-- the area of the exposed surface -- the airflow over the exposed surface -- the temperature of the liter of water -- the air pressure at the exposed surface -- the relative humidity of the air in the room -- the transparency of the liter container are all relevant to the rate of evaporation.
One liter of air at 101.325 equals on liter of air at 101.325. It is a trick question of sorts, because the metric unit of measurement "liter" is defined by said amount of matter in an atmosphere of 101.325 KPa.
Disregarding the weight of the balloon or pontoon that holds the air . . .1 cubic foot (1,728 cubic inches, 7.481 gallons) for each 62.4 pounds of weight.Note: If the weight is hanging in the water, underthe air, then the weight itself produces somebuoyancy, and less air is required to keep it from sinking to the bottom. The amount of buoyancydepends on the volume of the weighty object, which can't be determined from the informationgiven in the question. (i.e., none)