L
A drop is measured in microlitres; 1 mL= 1 000 μL.
Either. It depends on the amount of liquid to be measured and the precision required.
Plasma volume is typically measured in milliliters (ml) or liters (L).
Almost always liters (L). Careful of the units that the question is asking for though. If it wants its answer in mL, you would have to convert the L to mL after solving.
Juice can be measured in both liters (l) and milliliters (ml), with 1 liter equaling 1,000 milliliters. The choice of measurement typically depends on the volume being measured; larger quantities are often expressed in liters, while smaller amounts are measured in milliliters. For example, a juice bottle might be labeled as containing 1 liter, while a serving might be measured as 250 ml.
A standard household bucket is measured in litres.
The volume of a liquid is usually measured in Litres (L), millilitres (ml) or cubic centimeters (cm3)
The volume of the gas tank of a car is measured in litres (L) or Gallons (Gal).
Volume = Space occupied by a matter is measured in ml or l...
A beaker is typically measured in milliliters (ml) or liters (L) to indicate its capacity for holding liquid. The graduated markings on the side of a beaker help to measure the volume of liquid it contains.
The measured component of the orbital magnetic dipole moment of an electron with quantum number (a) ml is given by -μBsqrt(l(l+1) - m_l*(m_l-1)), and with quantum number (b) ml is given by -μB*m_l. Here, μB is the Bohr magneton, l is the angular momentum quantum number, and m_l is the magnetic quantum number.
Yes a vase can either be 20 milliliters in volume or 2 liters in volume but not both.