I believe 98 newtons.
Explanation (I'm a bit rusty): 1 cubic meter of water = 10,000 cubic centimeters, the density of water is 1g/cubic cm, so the water's mass is 10,000g, or 10 kg. Newtons (the SI unit of force) are expressed in kg*m/s^2, and gravity accelerates us at 9.8m/s. 10kg*9.8m/s^2=98 Newtons. Pretty sure that's right, learned it in physical science.
Depends. A cubic meter of WHAT? If it's a cubic meter of lead, it would weigh quite a bit. A cubic meter of air, not so much. The standard substance that is used to relate metric measurements to each other is water. The "gram" was defined as the mass (not weight, but similar) of one cubic centimeter of water at normal temperature. There are 1 million cubic centimeters in a cubic meter, so a cubic meter of water would have a mass of 1 million grams, or 1,000 kilograms, or 1 metric ton. To obtain the mass of 1 cubic meter of some other substances, simply multiply the specific gravity of the substance by the mass of a cubic meter of water.
Use Archimedes' Principle: the buoyancy force of a submerged (or partially submerged) object is the weight of the volume of water that the object displaces. In other words, find the volume of the object that is under water, and multiply that by the density of water (1000 kg/cubic meter) and gravity (9.8 meter/sec/sec).
A cubic meter of pure water has weight of 1000kg
One cubic meter contains 264.2 US gallons of water OR 220 UK gallons of water.
Converting cubic meters into liters has nothing to do with the substance being measured (e.g. diesel). Both are measurements of volume, and one cubic meter is always equal to one thousand liters:1 cubic meter = 1,000 liters Specific Gravity is the weight of a certain amount of a substance compared with the weight of an equal amount of pure water. In other words, we know that one gallon of water weighs 8.34 pounds, and so to find the weight of one gallon of a substance with a specific gravity of 0.86 one would simply multiply as follows:8.34 x 0.86 = 7.1724 poundsHere are instructions for finding the weight of one cubic meter (one thousand liters) of a substance having a specific gravity of 0.86:First, convert one cubic meter into gallons, because we already know the weight of water per gallon:1 cubic meter = 264.172051 US gallonsNext, find the weight of one cubic meter (264.172051 gallons) of water:264.172051 x 8.34 = 2,203.19491 pounds (This is the weight of one cubic meter of water)Finally, use the specific gravity of the substance in question (0.86) to find its weight in comparison to that of the water:2,203.19491 x 0.86 = 1,894.74762 pounds (This is the weight of one cubic meter of diesel assuming that its specific gravity is 0.86)
Depends on what the cubic meter is made of. A cubic meter of air will be something entirely different from a cubic of water.
There are 220 Imperial gallons to one cubic meter.
At room temp 1 cubic Meter of water weighs 1 Metric tonne
what is the weight of salt water of one cubic meter
There are 264.2 US gallons in one cubic meter of water.
-- 1 cubic meter of space is 1,000 liters of space. -- 1 liter of water has 1 kilogram of mass. -- 1,000 liters of water has 1,000 kilograms of mass = 1 metric ton -- 1 metric ton of water fills 1 cubic meter of space. -- A substance with a specific gravity of 2.7 packs 2.7 times as much mass into the same space. -- 2.7 metric tons of it pack into 1 cubic meter of space. -- The number of cubic meters it occupies is (the number of metric tons)/2.7 . -- For ANY substance, the number of cubic meters it fills is (the # of metric tons)/(specific gravity) .
There are 1,000 liters of water that can fit in 1 cubic meter. For water, 1 milliliter is equivalent to 1 cubic centimeter.