The volume of 1 pound of air can vary depending on the temperature, pressure, and density of the air. At standard temperature and pressure (STP) conditions of 0 degrees Celsius and 1 atmosphere pressure, the volume of 1 pound of air is approximately 13.1 cubic feet. However, if the air is at a different temperature or pressure, you would need to use the ideal gas law equation (PV = nRT) to calculate the volume.
it will depend completly on the specific pound of chicken you use. You can find the density by finding the volume it takes up in Litres. Then divide the pound by the volume, this creates a value for denstiy in pounds/litre.
It depends on its material. In other words its density.
It is the same. One pound equals to 16 ounces and one ounce equals 0.06 of a pound. Also this relates only to solid (weight) ounces. There are two different kinds of ounces, ounces of weight/mass and ounces of volume (fluid). This can change when you are using the ounces to measure a non-liquid such as flour or sugar since the weight of dry items is not the same as their volume. An ounce of volume is called a "fluid ounce."
That's going to depend on what substance you have a pound of. 1 pound of air . . . several liters 1 pound of water . . . about 0.454 of one liter 1 pound of gold . . . only about 0.024 of one liter Correction: There actually aren't any litres in a pound, no matter what you're measuring. It would be interesting to know why the question is being asked however. It seems to be quite a common question, and I think a lot of these are from students wanting us respondents to do their homework for them! It shows a good many people are very unclear of the basics of mass, volume and density, so when faced with an Imperial - Metric conversion they muddle the units.
8 oz = 1/2 lb. One pound equals to 16 ounces and one ounce equals 0.06 of a pound. Also this relates only to solid (weight) ounces. There are two different kinds of ounces, ounces of weight/mass and ounces of volume (fluid). This can change when you are using the ounces to measure a non-liquid such as flour or sugar since the weight of dry items is not the same as their volume. An ounce of volume is called a "fluid ounce."
To float 1 pound, you would need to displace 1 pound of air, which is equivalent to approximately 13.6 cubic feet of air at sea level.
A pound of air is NOT a measure of pressure. A unit of pressure would be a weight ( a force really) for instance pound by a surface (square inch for instance). Pound is a unit of weight only. At sea level on earth barometric pressure, 1 cubic metre weighs 1.2kg (or 2.64 pound). Which means 1 pound of air represents a volume of 0.379 cubic metre of air. This obviously varies with atmospheric pressure (the air pressure) and the gravitional pull. a pound of air would represent a much bigger (6 times bigger roughly) volume on the moon for instance.
Weight doesn't tell you the volume. One pound of air, one pound of water, and one pound of gold all have vastly different volumes.
Both a Pound of Iron and a Pound of Air weight the same ... One Pound ... neither is 'heavier.'
1 pound of soda ash is equal to approximately 2 cups in volume.
The volume of a pound of C-4 explosive can vary depending on its density, which is around 1.59 g/cm^3. If we assume this density, then 1 pound of C-4 would have a volume of roughly 0.72 cubic inches.
1 94-pound bag of cement is approximately equal to 1 cubic foot.
That depends on the volume of the brick. Whatever its volume is, its weight underwater is(weight of the brick in air) minus (weight of an equal volume of water)
yes 1 mole hot air have more volume then cold air
it will depend completly on the specific pound of chicken you use. You can find the density by finding the volume it takes up in Litres. Then divide the pound by the volume, this creates a value for denstiy in pounds/litre.
one pound
The pound is a unit of weight, so anything that weighs one pound, regardless of whether it is a solid, a liquid, or anything else, has the same weight.