If you meant to say "167 cc," then I can help you.
"cc" stands for cubic centimeters. Fortunately, 1 cc = 1 mL.
Short answer: 167 cc = 167 mL
1000ml in One litre.
332.6 F
15 ml in a tbsp.
Mercury is a warm planet, with an average temperature of 167C.
Approximately -184 degrees facing away from the sun and about 427 degrees facing the sun, we do not have an accurate temperature because if an astronaut was to land on Mercury, he would drop dead when he gets 80 miles close to Mercury.
Yes it does. Mercury is one of the few metals that is liquid at room temperature. It evaporates very slowly but it does evaporate. This is significant for safety. Mercury is quite toxic to humans, if it is spilt it is very important that it is correctly cleaned up or it will slowly evaporate, possibly over many years and can be breathed in. If it is ever necessary to work with an open container of mercury it should be covered with oil so that the surface can not evaporate.
A barometer measures air pressure. A mercury one does so by taking a tube full of mercury which is inverted into a dish of mercury. The height of mercury remaining in the tube is a measure of the air pressure.
Because it is so close to the Sun and has almost no atmosphere, the side facing away from the Sun is very cold (-170 Celsius, -275 Fahrenheit) and the side facing it gets very hot (450 Celsius, 840 Fahrenheit). In case you were wondering, it is hot enough to melt lead, but only when it's facing the Sun enough. And Venus can melt lead anywhere (all year) because it's extremely dense atmosphere traps the heat in a greenhouse effect. These are the only two planets that can melt lead.