What is the unit for volume or loudness
Yes. There is no SI fundamental unit for volume, so any volume unit is derived.
No, the mass per unit volume is density not intensity.
No.* Mass is measured in kilograms. * Volume is measured in cubic meters (which is not a base unit, but a derived unit).
Density is mass per unit volume, and sometimes in some industries weight per unit volume is used. Weight per unit volume is also sometimes called specific weight. Weight and mass are not the same. Volume per unit mass is called specific volume, and is the reciprocal of density. It is not clear whether volume per unit weight can also be used as a measure of specific volume.
Density is defined as mass per unit volume, not mass per unit weight. It is a measure of how much mass is contained in a specific volume of a substance.
this is a very very hard question but the answere you r lookin for is definitaly DENSITY gaurnteed
Liter is a unit of volume, kilogram is a unit of mass. You have to divide the volume by the density of the substance, to get the mass.Liter is a unit of volume, kilogram is a unit of mass. You have to divide the volume by the density of the substance, to get the mass.Liter is a unit of volume, kilogram is a unit of mass. You have to divide the volume by the density of the substance, to get the mass.Liter is a unit of volume, kilogram is a unit of mass. You have to divide the volume by the density of the substance, to get the mass.
Grams is NOT a unit of volume. It is a unit of weight or mass.
A cubic centimetre (cm3) is a unit of volume (V).
Decibels
A litre is a unit of volume.
cm is a unit of length. cm3 is a unit of volume.
I not a metric unit of anything! A litre is one metric unit for volume.
The metric unit of volume is in liters and milliliters
By definition, a unit cube has a volume of 1. "Unit" means 1 so if the volume was not 1 it would not be called a unit cube!
If, by 'metric system', you mean the 'SI system', then there is no base unit for volume. The unit for volume is called a 'derived unit', and it is the cubic metre (m3).
loundness