Those are all units of volume. 1 cubic meter = 1000 liters; 1 liter = 1000 milliliters; cubic centimeter is an alternative name for milliliter.
It depends on the system in which you are working, but the units will be the same as for a regular solid. In the International System of Units (SI units, for short), the unit for volume is m3.
The official SI unit for volume is cubic meters. For smaller things, liters and cubic centimeters can be used, among others.
numbers
10 cubic centimeters of water has the same volume as 10 milliliters of water.
Cubic centimeters would be most appropriate for volume
Cubic inches, cubic centimeters, liters, quarts, and gallons
Commonly used units include cubic meters, cubic decimeters (equal to liters), cubic centimeters (equal to milliliters).
Volume_of_cylinder = π x radius2 x height = π x (6/2)2 x 7 = 63π cubic units. ≈ 197.92 cubic units 1 liter = 1000 cubic centimeters 1 cubic meter = 1000 liters So (assuming your measurements are in the same units) you will need to convert the 197.92 cubic units to cubic centimeters and then divide by 1000 to get the answer in liters; or convert it to cubic meters and multiply by 1000 to get it into liters.
If you want to measure their volumes, you can use liters (= cubic decimeters), milliliters (= cubic centimeters) or cubic millimeters.
If you mean the units, capacity, or volume, is expressed in cubic meters, cubic decimeters (= liters), cubic centimeters (= milliliters), etc.
There are two systems of measuring volumes, in case you didn't know. They are the US and the metric. The US units are the teaspoon, tablespoon, fluid ounce, cup, pint, quart, gallon, cubic inch, cubic foot, cubic yard, acre foot, and cubic mile. The metric units are the liter and some cubic metric length units. Scientific units (SI) are in liters
Cubic Centimeters
In metric units, volume is measured in cubic meters, liters (= cubic decimeters) or milliliters (= cubic centimeters). The same units of volume are used, regardless of whether you are measuring liquids, or dry stuff - there are no separate "dry units".
There are many units: Liters, cubic centimeters, gallons, teaspoons, tablespoons, fluid ounces, cubic inches, quarts, cups, cubic meters, cubic kilometers, barrels, and many more obscure units.
Volume refers to the amount of space something takes up. Commonly used units include cubic meters, liters, or cubic centimeters - or any other "cubic" unit (cubic feet, cubic light-years, etc.)
It depends on the system in which you are working, but the units will be the same as for a regular solid. In the International System of Units (SI units, for short), the unit for volume is m3.
The first thing to do would be to convert either unit into the other. 1 liter = 1000 cubic centimeters If you convert liters into cubic centimeters, you will get 1.5L = 1500 cubic centimeters. Hence the product is: 28950 cm^6. Notice that the units have no physical significance.