Further information - pressure - is required before this question can be answered.
exactly three over sixty-five million pounds or probably maybe in a book on a page that's in my locker. on like some chart. 3.7 i believe.
table 3.7 in prentice hall chemistry That's going to depend on the pressure of the sample as well as its temperature.
20
100ltrs
The mass of 20 litres of water is 20 kilograms.
P=3atm=3(101325)pa V=2 liters=2000cm^3 T=20=293K (P.V)/(T)=(p.V)/t t=897K=606 degree celsius
All materials or objects of 20 degrees get the temperature of 20 degrees Celsius in air.
20 degrees Celsius is a measurement of temperature - air at 20 degrees Celsius is a comfortable temperature for people to live in. 20 degrees Celsius = 68 degrees Fahrenheit
20 degrees Celsius is a temperature or a temperature range on the Celsius scale, where 0 is the freezing point of water and 100 is the boiling point of water. If the air temperature is 20 degrees Celsius, the weather is cool but not cold. If a pot of water is raised in temperature by 20 degrees Celsius it is heated by a set amount. 20 degrees Celsius is the same as 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
Surface oxydation with the oxygen from the air.
Aproximately 4 grams of potassium chlorate will dissolve in 50 g of water at 20 degrees celsius.
n=PV/RT The answer does not depend on the molecular weight of air (Avogadro's principle). n=1.2 moles