The answer depends on the shape and dimensions of the water bottle. If the bottle has a diameter of 21.21 mm (the width of a nickel), it will hold 696 coins. In fact the number of coins will be much smaller because the bottle just described would be 1.36 metres (approx 4.5 feet) tall! Wider bottles will hold a lot fewer coins because of spaces between the coins as well as between the coins and the sides of the bottle.
There are 500 milliliters of water in a 0.5 liter Dasani water bottle.
Well, its more than one since one Zephyrhills bottle is 0.9 fl oz. So I guess 8.88 repeating. If you're talkin like 28 grams type of ounces you'd have to weigh the bottle and figure from there.
There are 1000 millilitres in one litre. Therefore, 750 millilitres is equal to 750/1000 = 0.75 litres, or three quarters of a litre.
A cubic meter of water is equivalent to 1000 liters. The typical bathtub holds around 150-200 liters of water, so a cubic meter of water could fill about 5-7 baths.
A standard water bottle typically holds 16.9 fluid ounces. To determine how many water bottles are in 60 ounces, you would divide 60 by 16.9. This calculation results in approximately 3.55 water bottles. Since you cannot have a fraction of a water bottle, you would round up to 4 water bottles.
20 i think
It depends on with what you fill the bottle. If the bottle is filled with water, then 0 calories are inside the bottle. As for the bottle itself, I have to recommend not consuming the plastic and getting your calories elsewhere.
To fill the bottle, you would need 0.13 L of water. This is equivalent to 130 milliliters.
1 GALLON
That sounds like an excellent math experiment - see how many quarters it takes to fill one inch of the can - then multiply out how many inches tall the can is so you can know about how many quarters it will take to fill the whole can!
650
You can generally just fill the bottle a quarter of water and put in enough dry ice chunks to fill the bottom of the container; I'll say about 6 normal sized chunks for a 2-liter bomb.
500
A standard Jack Daniel's bottle, typically 750 milliliters, contains approximately 25.4 ounces. Since a quarter is 0.25 ounces, there are about 102 quarters in a standard bottle of Jack Daniel's.
To estimate how many pennies it takes to fill a 16.9 oz water bottle, we first convert the volume to cubic centimeters, noting that 16.9 oz is approximately 500 mL, which equals 500 cubic centimeters (cc). A penny has a diameter of about 1.9 cm and a thickness of 0.15 cm, giving it a volume of roughly 0.36 cc. Dividing the bottle's volume by the penny's volume, it would take around 1,388 pennies to fill the bottle.
A dime weighs about 2.268 grams, and water weighs about 1 gram per milliliter. So, a 16.9 FL OZ bottle of water is about 500 grams. Therefore, you would need around 220 dimes to fill a 16.9 FL OZ bottle of water. But hey, who's counting?
That depends on the size of the shoebox.