Those are typical units in the metric system; the most recent version of the metric system is called the SI. Liter is a derived unit (equal to a cubic decimeter), but it can still be considered part of the SI.
Those are typical units in the metric system; the most recent version of the metric system is called the SI. Liter is a derived unit (equal to a cubic decimeter), but it can still be considered part of the SI.
Those are typical units in the metric system; the most recent version of the metric system is called the SI. Liter is a derived unit (equal to a cubic decimeter), but it can still be considered part of the SI.
Those are typical units in the metric system; the most recent version of the metric system is called the SI. Liter is a derived unit (equal to a cubic decimeter), but it can still be considered part of the SI.
Those are typical units in the metric system; the most recent version of the metric system is called the SI. Liter is a derived unit (equal to a cubic decimeter), but it can still be considered part of the SI.
It depends on the type of gasoline, and other factors such as temperature and pressure, but gasoline has an approximate density of 737.22 kilogram/cubic meter. 737.22 kilogram/cubic meter = 0.73722 kilogram/liter = 737.22 gram/liter 42.4 liters * 0.73722 kilograms/liter = 31.258 kilograms or since you wanted grams, not kilograms... 42.4 liters * 737.22 gram/liter = 31258 grams(http://forum.onlineconversion.com/showthread.php?t=1114)
Near the surface of the Earth, every kilogram has a weight of 9.8 Newton. (Weight is a type of force.)
Oil is slightly less dense than water and a litre of water weighs a kilogram. It would be less than a kilogram, but by how much depends on the type of oil.
I'd say you're missing a term. As it stands, liters per meter makes no sense (liter is volume, meter is length. "Liters per square meter" would be a measure of average depth.
The density of seawater varies from 1020 to 1029 kg/cubic meter, with 1027 kg/cubic meter being cited most often for water at the ocean's surface. There are 1,000 liters per cubic meter, so the density of seawater can also be expressed as 1.027 kg/liter (for surface seawater). Thus 1 liter of seawater will weigh 1.027 kg.
The unit for mass that is most commonly associated with the metric system is the kilogram. Strictly speaking, "weight", which is a type of force, is measured in Newtons.
A spring meter is a meter that measures weight. It is a type of scale which uses a spring.
There is no unit "cubic liter." In the metric system, a liter of water weighs 1 kilogram and takes up 1000 cubic centimeters of space. Thus, 4000 grams (a measure of weight) of water would equate to either 4 liters (liquid volume) or 4000 cubic centimeters (spacial volume).
A meter stays a meter. Always and forever.
To convert the density of fuel from kilograms to metric tonnes, divide the density value in kilograms by 1000. This is because there are 1000 kilograms in a metric tonne. For example, if the density of the fuel is 800 kilograms per cubic meter, the density in metric tonnes would be 0.8 metric tonnes per cubic meter.
Which type of meter accents the first beat in each measure? duple meter triple meter neither a nor b both a and b
Liter (L)