It depends on the temperature and pressure. A litre of pure water at room temperature (20 deg C) and 1 bar has a mass of 0.998 207 1 kilograms.
Since 1mL of water is equal to 1g, then 1000mL (or 1L) is equal to 1000g (or 1kg). Thus: 1L = 1kg.
There are 0.1 liters in 100milliliters of water because 1L = 1000mL.
1L.
Yes. 1L=1000mL
Fill 7L and pour into 6Lthere will be 1L left over in 7Lpour 1L into 6L and refill 7Lpour 7L into 6L and what is remaining in 7L is 2Lrepeat for all 5L.
No. The mass of mercury will be about 13 times as great.
Assuming that the water in the can is pure water (ie. with a specific gravity of 1) then the mass of the water in the can is 5.5kg (1L of pure water has a mass of 1kg), leaving the mass of the can to be 850g.
1L = 1 cubic decimeter = 1,000 cubic centimeter
1L =1000cc or mL1000*1.04=1040G or 1.04Kg
You Need to know the density of the fluid you want to convert to And use Density=Mass/Volume Kg/m3 = kg/m3 1m3 = 1000 litres. there fore. Litre = Mass/(Density*1000)
They are all Metric measurements.
First take 170g of NH3 . Then dissolve in 1L of water
500ml - 1l
No, It's totally different. 1M of K2Cr2O7 is 294.19g/water 1L on the other hands, 1N of K2Cr2O7 is 49.04 g/ water 1L
1 1kg = 1000g 1L = 1000mL Unfortunately, the U.S. Customary System isn't as simple as the Metric System.
no extra water the 1L of water can be filtered through sand and activated carbon to remove some pollution, or it can be purified by evaporation and recondensation, or by chemical methods such as precipitation, without using any extra water
no liter is a measurement of volume because 1L is 1000cm3 and cm3 is a measure of volume