1 litre.
If you were to take a cube with a volume of 1 m3 and filled it with water, 1000 L of water would fill it exactly. 1dm3 is 1l. This 10(1m) times 10 times 10 is 1000.
Well, darling, there are approximately 37.85 liters in a 10-gallon tank. So, if you're looking to fill 'er up, you better have that many liters on hand. But hey, who's counting? Oh right, you are.
Answer: 10 jars would fill the container. Step-by-step explanation: 10 jars = 1.05 * 10 = 10.5 Liters.
Well, honey, if we're talking basic math here, you can fill up 10 half-liter bottles from a five-liter container. It's simple division, darling. Just take that five liters and divide it by 0.5 liters per bottle, and voila! You've got your answer.
10' x 5' x 4' is 200 cubic feet which equates to 5,663.4 liters.
There are 10 liters per decaliter.
10 liters.
Fill a container three times using the 7-liter jar (which will give you 21 liters), then take out water with the 11-liter jar (which will give you 10 liters).
One breath contains about 1.5 liters of air, but not sure how many liters of horse
To fill a 60-liter tank at a rate of 0.1 liters per second, you can calculate the time required by dividing the tank's volume by the filling rate. This would be 60 liters ÷ 0.1 liters/second = 600 seconds. Converting seconds to minutes, it would take 600 seconds ÷ 60 = 10 minutes to fill the tank.
about 10
10 ml = .01 liters x 100=1.0 liters 100 hours