At 4°C pure water has a density of 1000 kg/1 m3. 1 litre = 1000 cm3 3 litre = 3000 cm3 = 0.003 m3 Mass = Density x Volume = 1000 kg/1 m3 x 0.003 m3 = 3 kg
Pure water has a density of 1,000 kg/m3
kg is a mass, ml is a volume. However with water, 1 kg = 1 liter = 1000ml
90 litres of water equals approximately 23 3/4 gallons, and a gallon of water weighs 8 pounds. So mulitply 23 3/4 gallons by 8, and the answer is 190.25 pounds, or 86.30 kg.
The most common unit for density is kg per meter3. Formula for density is D = mass over volume where, m = mass and v = volume. Density of water is 1.00 kg/m3
The density of pure water at +4 degrees C, is 1 g/ml. The volume, then, of 5000 kg of water is 5000 liters.
1.0 litre = 1.0 kg of pure water at 4 degrees C and at 760 mm atmospheric pressure.Answer: 1.0 litre
Fresh, clean, clear, pure, standard water, at standard pressure and temperature, would be 1,000 liters, or 1 cubic meter.
At 4°C pure water has a density of 1000 kg/1 m3. 1 litre = 1000 cm3 3 litre = 3000 cm3 = 0.003 m3 Mass = Density x Volume = 1000 kg/1 m3 x 0.003 m3 = 3 kg
0.737 kg. The answer is correct but i tell the calculation density=mass/volume density of petrol at 60*f=737.22 kg/cm3 1 litre=1000 cm3 (1 cm3=1/1000 litre) 737.22(kg/cm3)=mass(kg)/volume(cm3) 737.22(kg/cm3) * volume(cm3)=mass 737.22 * (1/1000 litre)=mass(kg) 0.737 kg=mass There is no conversion. One is volume and the other is mass or weight.
That depends on the body of water. Average for ocean water is approx: 1,020 to 1,029 kg•m−3 Which is only slightly more than the 1000 Kg•m−3 for pure water
Under.Another answer:According to Wikipedia, "Because the density of pure ice is about 920 kg/m³, and that of sea water about 1025 kg/m³, typically only one-tenth of the volume of an iceberg is above water."
A litre is a measure of volume and kg is a measure of mass (weight). Depending on density to answer this. A millilitre of water is a gram. So if you were working with pure water at sealevel they would be equal. but other than that it could not be answered.
500cc
By definition 1 liter of water at 4o C is 1 kilogram.
Pure water has a density of 1,000 kg/m3
density = mass / volume density = 0.250 kg / (0.05 m)3 density = 0.250 kg / 0.000125 m3 density = 2000 kg/m3 (For comparison, pure water's density is about 1000 kg/m3)