A litre is a volumetric measurement and kg (kilogram) is a measurement of weight. Specific gravity is a measure of density. It compares density of elements or material (stuff) to the weight of one kilogram of water. If the material (stuff) in question is less dense (lighter) than water, additional volume of the stuff is needed to equal one kilogram of water. The opposite (meaning less stuff) is needed for heavey stuff. In this case the specific gravity of 79 means the material is 79 times more dense than water so only one 79th of a litre is needed to equal a kilogram of water so (X litres/815 kg = 79; X - 10.3 litres)
1 liter (1000 cm3) of a substance having density (sg) 1.0 has a mass of 1 kg
So
50 / 1.3 = 38
(38,461538461538461538461538461538)
50 US gallons is 189.27 litres.
18.85 (The gravity on mars is roughly 37% of the Earths gravity)
50,000 x 50 x 10-6 = 2.5 litres of chorine
The volume of 10.9 mol of helium at STP is 50 litres.
Rounded to two decimal places, 50 litres is equal to 87.99 pints.
It would be useful to know what grade of Acetic Acid you are using as differing grades have slightly different specific gravities. Based upon the specific gravity being 1.05, then 50 litres x 1.05 = 52.5kg
50 - 60 litres 13 - 16 Gallons (US) 11 - 13 Gallons (UK)
For a 3.1 Litre Engine, the quantity of coolant 50/50 (Means 50% Antifreeze + 50% Water) or referred as premixed formula valid for most parts of Canada is 12.9 Litres, to be precise,, but if you even put 13 litres, it will not harm the reservoir tank or surge tank.
50 ounces is 1.417 litres.
Mass = sg * volume = 0.82 * 50 kg = 41 kg
50 litres is 50,000mL
1.014 g/ml
when a battery is fully charged , the amount of sulfuric acid mixed with the water is sufficient to give a specific gravity of about 1.3 when battery is discharged to 50 percent, the specific gravity reading should be 1.2 any specific gravity reading that's less than 1.1 usually indicates a dead batteryThe answer isC. 1.3.
50 litres will have 5 times as many gallons than 10 litres. So 50 litres = 5 times 2.2 gallons = 11 gallons
50 liters = 13.2086026 US gallons
(50 metres)3 x (1,000 litres per cubic metre) = 125,000,000 litres
A stomach can hold over 50 litres! Enjoy and start drinking!