Many types of gasoline are prepared; the mass is between 4,6 g and 5 g.
To find the volume of a liquid, you can use the formula: volume = mass / density. Given a mass of 65 g and a density of 5.45 g/mL, the volume would be calculated as follows: volume = 65 g / 5.45 g/mL ≈ 11.93 mL. Therefore, the volume of the liquid is approximately 11.93 mL.
The density of the gasoline is calculated by dividing its mass (3.1 g) by its volume (3.5 mL). Density = mass/volume. So, the density is 0.886 g/mL.
Density is calculated by dividing the mass of the substance by its volume. In this case, the density of gasoline would be 2700 grams ÷ 4000 ml = 0.675 grams/ml. So, the density of the gasoline is 0.675 grams per milliliter.
1 liter = 1000 ml 6.5 liters = 6.5 x 1000 ml = 6500 ml
0.065 L = 65 ml. The conversion is 1000 ml = 1 L, thus 0.065 L x 1000 ml/L = 65 ml.
The density of gasoline typically ranges from about 0.71 to 0.77 grams per milliliter. Using an average density of 0.74 g/ml, the mass of 75 ml of gasoline would be approximately 55.5 grams (75 ml x 0.74 g/ml = 55.5 g). However, the exact mass can vary depending on the specific formulation of the gasoline.
The mass of 1000 ml of ethyl alcohol (approximately 789 grams) is less than that of 1000 ml of gasoline (approximately 750-770 grams, depending on the specific type). Thus, ethyl alcohol is generally lighter than gasoline. Therefore, 1000 ml of ethyl alcohol is not greater in mass than 1000 ml of gasoline; rather, it is usually less.
To find the volume of a liquid, you can use the formula: volume = mass / density. Given a mass of 65 g and a density of 5.45 g/mL, the volume would be calculated as follows: volume = 65 g / 5.45 g/mL ≈ 11.93 mL. Therefore, the volume of the liquid is approximately 11.93 mL.
The density of the gasoline is calculated by dividing its mass (3.1 g) by its volume (3.5 mL). Density = mass/volume. So, the density is 0.886 g/mL.
Density is calculated by dividing the mass of the substance by its volume. In this case, the density of gasoline would be 2700 grams ÷ 4000 ml = 0.675 grams/ml. So, the density of the gasoline is 0.675 grams per milliliter.
1 liter = 1000 ml 6.5 liters = 6.5 x 1000 ml = 6500 ml
0.065 L = 65 ml. The conversion is 1000 ml = 1 L, thus 0.065 L x 1000 ml/L = 65 ml.
65 mL = 0.065 LTo convert from mL to L, divide by 1000.
65 mL = 0.065 LTo convert from mL to L, divide by 1000.
0.065 ml Algebraic Steps / Dimensional Analysis Formula 65 microliters*1 ml 1000 microliters=0.065 ml
65 - 40 = 25 ml
In order to compare milliliters to grams, you must specify the fluid being measured. If it's pure water, it's easy; one milliliter equals 1 gram (at standard temperature and pressure). So 2250 ml of pure water would be 2250 grams, or 2.25 kilograms, or 2.25 liters. Salt water is more dense by just a bit, depending on HOW salty it is; ocean water is about 1.05 grams per milliliter. Pure alcohol? 0.789 grams per ml Gasoline? Between 0.71 and 0.77 grams per ml, depending on the grade. Please note that both gasoline and alcohol are highly flammable, but both are less dense than water. That means that alcohol and gasoline will float on top of the water; if you spray a gasoline fire with water, you're just spreading the gasoline - and the fire - around. For a fuel fire, the preferred solution is either PKP "Purple Potassium Powder", a dry powder agent, or aqueous film-forming foam. Either of these will float on top of the gasoline or alcohol and smother the fire.