1000 cubic cm
1000kg1 cubic centimeter has a mass of 1 gram.... 10cm in a decimeter; 103 =1000; 1000cm3 = 1dm3 (1 liter) ...1 cubic decimeter has a mass of 1000g = 1kg... 10dm in a meter; 103 = 1000; 1000dm3 = 1m3 ...1 cubic meter has a mass of 1000kg = 1 tonne.
1000gEdit: Incorrect.one cubic decimeter is 1/10th of a cubic meter. Since one cubic meter of water is 1000kg in mass, the answer is 100kg.Edit: Still incorrect. One cubic decimeter is 1/100th of a cubic meter. it weighs 1 kgOriginal poster: original answer was correct, 1000g is1kgAlso, 1 cubic decimeter is only 1/1000th of a cubic meter. 1 dm = 0.1m therefore in 3 dimensions 0.1m x 0.1m x 0.1m = 0.001 or 1/1000th
1L = 1 cubic decimeter = 1,000 cubic centimeter
1 cubic meter = 10 X 10 X 10 cubic decimeters. 1 cubic decimeter of water has a mass of 1 kilogram. Therefore, 1 cubic meter has a mass of 103 kilograms, or 1000 kilograms, and 3 cubic meters therefore have a mass of 3000 kilograms.
When the metric system was originally devised, the kilogram was defined so that 1,000 cubic centimeters (1 cubic decimeter) of pure water has a mass of exactly 1 kilogram.
Assuming pure water, at room temp, the density of water is approx 1g/ml A m3 of water is 1000 liters. As a ml in this is equal to a gram, a litre will be equal to a kg. The asnwer in this case is 1000kg.
The base unit of length is the meter, the unit of volume is the cubic meter. You can also take the third power of other units of length to get a unit of volume, for example cubic foot, cubic light-year or cubic angstrom. The basic unit of mass is the kilogram; it is not currently derived from the unit of length, although it was originally defined as the mass of one cubic decimeter of water.
is decimeter linear capacity or mass
The mass of 2 cubic meters of water is approximately 2000 kilograms.
a tank of ful of water that has a volume of 3.252 cubic metres would have a mass of?
A cubic centimeter of pure water at maximum density has a mass of what?
Teaspoon, Tablespoon, Cup, Pint, Quart, Gallon, Cubic Centimeter, Cubic Kilometer, Cubic Nanometer, Cubic decimeter, Cubic inch, Cubic foot, Cubic mile, Grams per Cubic _____ (usually metric), Ounces per _____ (usually american).