If we ignore the weight of the empty container, then we can do this the easy way:
1 liter of pure water at standard temperature is supposed to have 1 kg of mass.
1 cubic meter = 1,000 liters, so it would hold 1,000 kg of water (which is also a metric ton).
On earth, 1,000 kg of mass weighs 9,800 newtons(2204.62 pounds). (rounded)
The answer depends on the quantity of air.
Water, 0 degrees Celsius is 32 degrees Fahrenheit which is the freezing point for water.
See the Web Links to the left for a table of the vapor pressure of water at various temperatures.
0 degrees Celsius is freezing, but really water freezes at just BELOW that temperature.
It is 100 degrees Celsius that water boils at.
The density of fresh water at 17 degrees Celsius is 998.77 kilograms per cubic meter. The density of fresh water at 19 degrees Celsius is 998.40 kilograms per cubic meter.
At 25 degrees Celsius the density of fresh water is 997.04 kilograms per cubic meter or 0.99704 grams per cubic centimeter. The mass m = 0.8 cubic meter times 997.04 kilograms per cubic meter = 797.632 kilograms.
Yes, fresh water of 10 degrees Celsius has a density of 999.728 kilograms per cubic meter. Seawater of 10 degrees Celsius and of 3.5 % salinity has a density of 1026.978 kilograms per cubic meter.
What is the density of water at 37 degrees Celsius?
The density of water at 24 degrees Celsius is approximately 997.0 kilograms per cubic meter.
At 82 degrees Celsius fresh water has a density of 970.2 kilograms per cubic meter.
Fresh water at a temperature of 10 degrees Celsius has a density of 999.70 kilograms per cubic meter or 0.9997 grams per cubic centimeter. Sea water with a salinity of 3.5 percent at a temperature of 10 degrees Celsius has a density of 1026.98 kilograms per cubic meter or 1.02698 grams per cubic centimeter.
The lowest possible temperature for a cubic meter of air holding 50 g of water vapor at 10 degrees Celsius is the dew point temperature, at which the air becomes saturated. The dew point temperature is around 7.7 degrees Celsius for these conditions.
Density of water (H2O) is dependent on temperature, among other factors. At 35 degrees Celsius the density of H20 is 994.1-kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m^3).
The answer depends on the quantity of air.
The density of water at 53 degrees Celsius is approximately 0.9769 grams per cubic centimeter.
The density of water at 25 degrees Celsius is 997.04 kilograms per cubic meter or 0.99704 grams per cubic centimeter.