Fresh water weighs approximately 1000 kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m3) at standard temperature and pressure.
It depends on the temperature of the water. At 4 degrees Celsius fresh water has a density of 0.99997 kilograms per litre. At 100 degrees Celsius fresh water has a density of 0.9974 kilograms per litre. Water has a roughly a density of 1000 kg/m3 = 1000 g/L = 1.000 kg/dm3 = 1.000 kg/L = 1.000 g/cm3 = 1.000 g/mL.
2.7 m3 (2,700 liters) if the aluminum is at room temperature
Assuming the density of water is 1000 kg/m3, 32 cubic meters of water would weigh 32,000 kg or 32 metric tonnes.
mg is milligram, a measure of weight. Liter is a measure of volume. A liter of WATER would weigh 1 million milligrams- but a liter of alcohol would weigh about 700,000 mg- since alcohol is lighter than water. A liter of mercury would weigh MUCH more, since it is heavier than water. So, to answer your question, we would need to know a liter of WHAT?
The weight of sea water really depends on a number of variables, including the temperature, the amount of salt (salinity) and whatever other foreign items may be present, and the depth, thus the pressure. But to get to the basic answer, seawater, at the surface, on average weighs 1027 kg/m3, or just over 64.1 lbs per cubic foot. ----------- The question is another way of asking for density of salt water. Salt water has greater density than that of fresh water, due to the dissolved salt. Fresh water has a density of 1000 kg/cubic meter vs. an average density of 1027 kg/cubic meter for ocean salt water.
It depends on the temperature of the water. At 4 degrees Celsius fresh water has a density of 0.99997 kilograms per litre. At 100 degrees Celsius fresh water has a density of 0.9974 kilograms per litre. Water has a roughly a density of 1000 kg/m3 = 1000 g/L = 1.000 kg/dm3 = 1.000 kg/L = 1.000 g/cm3 = 1.000 g/mL.
1 liter of water weighs approximately 1 kilogram, which is equivalent to 1000 grams.
Approximately 2.0 tonnes/m3.
Blood has an average density of about 1060 kg/m3, pure water's density is slightly less at 1000 kg/m3.
1000Kg/m3
About 3,140 kg (about 6,922.5 lb). The cylinder volume is about 3.14 m3 (PIr2h). Water weights about 1,000 kg per 1 m3, so the water in the cylinder would weigh about 3,140 kg. NOTE: You can work out this problem with much more precision if you use a more precise value for PI. Also, the weight would vary depending on the purity of the water and the related temperatures.
2.7 m3 (2,700 liters) if the aluminum is at room temperature
At 22 degrees Celsius the density of fresh water is 997.77 kilograms per cubic metre (kg/m3) or 0.99777 g/cm3. The SI unit for density is kilograms per cubic metre (kg/m3. Water has roughly a density of 1000 kg/m3.
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.
1 g/m3 = 0.001 kg/m3 ⇒ 13.6 g/m3 = 0.0136 kg/m3
Water flow is measured in liters per second in the SI system.
Two grams per cm3 = 2,000 kg per m3