depends on the size of the person, probably 2 0r 3 average people
200
You could fit 1000 drinks in one cubic metre with ease.
it depends on how big the books are.
To calculate how many items can fit in a cubic meter, you first need to know the volume of each item in cubic meters. Then, divide the total volume of the cubic meter by the volume of each item to determine how many can fit. Keep in mind any inefficiencies due to packing arrangements.
To determine how many 60 dm³ bags fit in 1 cubic meter, first convert 1 cubic meter to cubic decimeters: 1 cubic meter equals 1,000 dm³. Then, divide 1,000 dm³ by 60 dm³ per bag, which gives you approximately 16.67. Therefore, you can fit 16 full 60 dm³ bags in 1 cubic meter, with some volume remaining.
1/c when c equals the volume of each can in cubic meters.
There are 1,000 liters of water that can fit in 1 cubic meter. For water, 1 milliliter is equivalent to 1 cubic centimeter.
The number of apples in a cubic meter would vary based on the size of the apples and how tightly they are packed. Estimating based on average-sized apples (8-10cm in diameter), you could fit around 500-700 apples in a cubic meter.
A 2400 cubic meter tank will hold up to 2.4 million liters.
The first step is to covert cubic centimeters (cm3) to cubic meters (m3) so we are working with the same units. Since there are 1,000,000 cm3 per m3: 339.3/1,000,000 = 0.0003393Next we just divide the volume of the room by the volume of each can: 144/0.0003393 = 424403.183So you would need approximately 424,403 cans to fill a 144 m3 room.
To determine how many 100-pound sacks of barite will fit in a 76 cubic meter silo, we first need to convert cubic meters to cubic feet (1 cubic meter = 35.3147 cubic feet). A 100-pound sack of barite typically occupies about 0.5 cubic feet. Therefore, a 76 cubic meter silo is approximately 2,688 cubic feet, allowing for around 5,376 sacks (2,688 cubic feet divided by 0.5 cubic feet per sack).
That depends entirely on the thickness of each tile !