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The answer depends on the density of the material being loaded. 12500 MT of steel bits will require fewer containers than 12500 MT of polysterene (styrofoam) beads.
5 gallons of what?you need to in the volume of a single dime and then find the volume of the container and divide that number into the volume of a single dime.AnswerFinding out how many dimes it takes to fill any container isn't as simple as dividing the volume of a dime into the volume of the container. There will be spaces between the dimes depending on how they are "distributed" or "arranged" in the container.
Partly fill a container with a liquid and mark its level on the side of the container. Then submerge the irregular object in the liquid and mark the new level. The volume of the irregular object is the difference in the two volumes marked in the container. Obviously, you need to ensure that the object is not soluble in the liquid. A variation on this method is to start with a container that is on a collecting tray. Fill the container to the brim, then gently insert the object and measure the liquid that overflows into the tray. This method requires only one measurement of the liquid's volume but it also requires great care to ensure that the object is submerged gently and that the meniscus (if any) is the same before and after. Not easy to do.
The answer depends on how large the prism is.
216 are.
Gases will expand to fill their containers.
No. The particles in a gas spread out and completely fill their entire container, regardless of the shape or volume of the container.
A gas will completely fill whatever container it's in as it will diffuse until it's concentration is the same throughout the container.
645divided by 21 equals 30.714. Hence, you can fill completely 30 such containers and 71.4% of the 31st container will be filled with water. Answer two If fill means completely fill, than you can fill 30 containers.
16 halfpint cartons of water are needed to fill the gallon container
That would be 16.6 tablespoons
You can fill 16 and have 13 gallons left over to partially fill container number 17.
Gas completely fills its container, liquid stays as a unit and fills the container with respect to gravity, and solids do not fill their containers
You would divide 882 by 15 and get 58.8. Since .8 of a container means its not all the way full then you could only fill 58 containers.
Several ways to achieve this - here is one solution. Fill the 5 litre container and pour it all into the 9 litre container. Fill the 5 litre container and pour it into the 9 litre container until the latter is full - leaving 1 litre in the 5 litre container. Empty the 9 litre container. Fill the 3 litre container and empty into 9 litre container. Repeat. There are now 6 litres in the 9 litre container. Pour the 1 litre from the 5 litre container into the 9 litre container which now contains 7 litres.
Use only approved metal or plastic gasoline containers. Remove fuel containers from vehicles and place them on the ground before refilling. Fill containers slowly to reduce the buildup of static electricity. Never overfill the container. Secure the container for transportation to avoid spills.
Solids and liquids both have fixed volumes... in that if they are put into a container, they will not expand to fill the container. Gases on the other hand, do the exact opposite - they expand to fill their containers, thus not having fixed volumes.