Not sure that anything has a volume of a cubic centremeter, since there is no such measure. Cubic centimetre, yes.
Density = Mass/Volume = 27 g / 10 cc = 2.7 grams per centimetre.
The volume of 1 US tablespoon is 14.786765 milliliters. 14.786765 milliliters are 14.786765 cubic centimeters.
1 cubic centimeter = 1000 cubic millimeter
The word is "centimeter" - a centimeter is 1/100 of a meter. A centimeter or a meter are units of length - you might use it to measure the length of your desk, your height, etc. A cubic centimeter, like any cubic measure, is a measure of volume. For example, you might use it to calculate the amount of liquid a cup or a jar can hold.
1 cubic cm is precisely equal to a volume of 1 cubic cm.Of ANY substance.
Density is defined as the mass per unit volume of a substance. It is calculated by dividing the mass in kilograms by the volume in cubic meters, and is usually expressed in kilograms per cubic meter or grams per cubic centimeter.
Cubic meters of what?Cubic meters are a measure of volume whereas tons are a measure of weight.Weight and volume are related by the density of the substance.
You can cut out a block of one cubic centimeter out of practically any substance.
CUBIC liters and cubic meters will work, depending on if the substance is solid or liquid.
I assume you are thinking of density. Density is the amount of mass per unit of volume of an object such as 20 kg/m^3. Which means 20 there are 20 kilograms for every cubic meter of an object.
The volume would be 9 cubic centimeters. If you meant to ask the density, that would be 4 grams per cubic centimeter.
Milliliters and cubic centimeters are units the measure volume. Volume refers to the space that an object or substance occupies.
As written the question is incomplete as: tonnes are a measure of mass; whereas cubic meters are a measure of volume. However, mass and volume are related for every substance by density: density = mass / volume → volume = mass / density. So if you know the density of the substance that makes up the 10,000 tonnes in tonne/m³ and divide it into the 10,000 tonnes you will get the volume in cubic meters that the substance occupies.