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Depends on tonnes of what? At 1 tonne per cubic mtere you would have 12.5 cubic metres.
yes, but you need to know the density of the substance you are converting
petroleum typically has a density of 0.8 so 1/0.8 = 1.25 cubic metres
A tonne is a measure of mass so there can be no such thing as a cubic tonne.
1 cubic metre of water weighs a tonne.
One tonne in cubic metres is equal to 2.831684659 cubic
You mean a cubic metre. It depends on the type of soil and how wet it is. Sand, wet - 1.92 tonne/cubic metre Sand, wet, packed - 2.08 tonne/cubic metre Sand, dry - 1.60 tonne/cubic metre Sand, loose - 1.44 tonne/cubic metre Sand, rammed - 1.68 tonne/cubic metre You can measure it yourself on a small scale, because gram/cubic centimetre is the same as tonne/cubic metre. So one cc of wet sand weighs about 1.92 grams.
There can be no such measure as a cubic tonne: that is mass cubed and you would probably need 12 dimensional space for that!
Here is an answer only possible when water is assumed. 1 cubic meter of pure water weighs 1 tonne. 1 tonne is 1 cubic meter. 2000 tonnes are 2000 cubic meters.
A tonne is a measure of weight A cubic meter is a measure of volume There is no direct conversion. They are related by the density of the substance, the greater the density, the smaller 1 tonne will take up, for example 1 tonne of Hydrogen takes about 11000 m3 whereas 1 tonne of mercury takes about 0.074 m3.
1 tonne
The question as stated makes no sense. a cubic foot is a measure of volume; a tonne is a measure of weight. The two are related by density = weight ÷ volume => volume = weight ÷ density So the number of cubic feet (an imperial measure) in 1 tonne (a metric measure) all depends upon the density of the substance weighing 1 tonne - Mercury is many times more dense than Hydrogen and so 1 tonne of Mercury will be much smaller in cubic feet than 1 tonne of Hydrogen.