The ice cubes produced in a typical ice cube tray are around 30 mL or 30g. Therefore, it would take approximately 12,000 ice cubes to have a mass of 163 lbs.
2 litres/ 20 ml = 2000 ml / 20 ml = 2000/20 = 100 of them.
2 is the answer
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't a ton a meaurement of mass, and mL that of volume? Then, it depends on the density (density = mass/volume)
This cannot be sensibly answered. A milliliter (mL or ml) is a measure of volume, mg is a measure of weight or mass.
Ice VolumeThe density of ice is 0.9167 g/mL; the given mass is 1.000gVolume = mass/density= 1.000 g/0.9167 g/mL= 0.9167 mLWater VolumeThe density of water is 0.9998 g/mL; the given mass is 1.000gVolume = mass/density= 1.000 g/0.9998 g/mL= 0.9998 mLThe volume of ice is 0.9167ml and the volume of water is 0.9998 mL
2000 2000 ml
One cup has a volume of about 236 mL. The density of ice is 0.92 g/mL. The mass of one cup of ice is 236 mL * 0.92 g/mL = 217 g
That is 2,000 ml
The ice cubes produced in a typical ice cube tray are around 30 mL or 30g. Therefore, it would take approximately 12,000 ice cubes to have a mass of 163 lbs.
2 litres/ 20 ml = 2000 ml / 20 ml = 2000/20 = 100 of them.
You will have roughly the same amount of ice as the amount of water you started out with, so probably about 5 mL of ice.
That depends what substance is in the 500 ml volume, and how much mass is in each ml of that substance. If the 500 ml are full of stones or lead, they contain many many mg of mass. If the 500 ml are full of water, they contain roughly 5,000 mg of mass. If the 500 ml are full of air, they contain far fewer mg of mass. If the 500 ml are empty, they contain no mg of mass at all.
There are 100 mL in 1 dL. Therefore in 20 dL, there are 2000 mL or 20*100. The answer is 2000 mL.
2000 mL = 67.6 US fluid ounces.
more than 2000 mL
NONE - you cannot measure centimeters in ml, or ice-versa.