Put simply for lets say the percentage of alcohol is 40%, for every 100mls the alcohol content would be 40 mls the rest is what ever the "drink" is made from
To convert a percentage to parts per million (ppm) for air volume, you would multiply the percentage by 10,000. Therefore, 7% of air volume would be 70,000 parts per million.
No. Alcohol percentage is measured per volume.
In the United States the percentage of alcohol by volume in Miller Lite is 4.2. It contains 110 calories per bottle or can according to the Miller website.
If you're asking about its volume, then you'd either measure it in milliliters or ounces. For the alcohol content, it would be measured in a percentage representing alcohol per volume
% V / V (percentage of volume per volume) =? V1 (solute volume) = 25 mL V (volume of the solution) = solute + solvent = 25 mL + 45 mL = 70 mL We apply the data to the formula of volume percentage of the solute per volume of solution, we will have:
It is a measure of weight per volume. How heavy something is for the space that it occupies. Otherwise known as density
It is 66 proof, so it is 33 per cent alcohol by volume.
suspicious densities are seen in both upper lobe
density is mass per unit volume, meaning that as mass increases ,the density increases. Unlike volume, as it increases the density decreases.
The amount of substance per unit volume or the number of moles of a substance per unit volume is called its MolarityI think you meant to say "What is the MASS of substance in a given volume called?", meaning what name is given to the mass-per-unit-volume of a substance, i.e. the mass of a chunk of it divided by its volume. The is density.
I am speculating: The relatively high number of carbs in bagel may reflect the fact that it is a relatively dense baked good - it weighs more per unit volume than, say, most breads. So it has more "stuff" in it per unit volume - meaning more carbs per unit volume.
12.3 units of mass per unit of volume.12.3 units of mass per unit of volume.12.3 units of mass per unit of volume.12.3 units of mass per unit of volume.