There is no metric unit for volume which is equal to 1.057. All measures of volume MUST have measurement units: these may be cubic to start with (gallon, pint, bushel) or derived from linear units (cubic inch, cubic yard).
1.057 is a pure number which has no units. It cannot, therefore, be a measure of volume.
I would place it in a container full of liquid after measuring the liquid. I would measure the amount of liquid displaced by the object. That amount is equal to the volume of the irregular object if it is fully submerged in the liquid.
A dekameter would be the appropriate, but rarely used, unit.
yes
A cube with sides measuring 100 cm in length has a volume of 1 million cm3
Measuring cylinders are commonly used to measure volume, with 1cm3 being the equal to 1ml.
Mg for measuring crime. Ml is the volume measure.
I would place it in a container full of liquid after measuring the liquid. I would measure the amount of liquid displaced by the object. That amount is equal to the volume of the irregular object if it is fully submerged in the liquid.
I would place it in a container full of liquid after measuring the liquid. I would measure the amount of liquid displaced by the object. That amount is equal to the volume of the irregular object if it is fully submerged in the liquid.
1 liter = 4.22 cups 1 cup = 0.23 L 1 L = 4 metric cups
No a millilitre is a measurement of volume usually used for measuring amounts of liquid. A gram is a measurement of weight.
There is no metric unit of capacity or volume that is equal to 1000 millimeters. This is because millimeters is length, and it has no relevance to capacity and/or volume.
One metric tablespoon is equal to fifteen mililitres, and one mililitre is a liquid measure equal to one cubic milimetre of volume. So fifteen tablespoons is equal to 225ml, or 225mm3 - 22.5cm3.
A milliliter is a metric unit of volume, equal to 1/1000 of a liter.
Liter
A dekameter would be the appropriate, but rarely used, unit.
A liter is the basic unit of volume in the metric system equal to 1.057 quarts1.057 Imperial quarts = .946 liters 1.057 US quarts = 1.000 liters
The cubic meter. Derived units, especially the cubic decimeter (equal to liter), are often used in practice.