The volume of nothing is nothing
100 grams of water at standard temperature and pressure has a volume of 100 cubic centimeters or 100 millilitres. The volume of 100 grams of any other substance will depend on its specific gravity or density: if less than that of water, it will have a greater volume; if greater than that of water, it will have a smaller volume.
Under normal conditions the volume would be 123.67 cubic centimeters as the density of water is 1 gm per cc
No, mL are a unit of volume and grams are a unit of mass. 1 mL of water has a mass of 1 g
1 gm/ml
Ml of what? If water then 25ml = 25grams, since the density is 1g/ml
40205 cm is a measure of distance of length. A length has no volume and without a volume there can be no water. Therefore, the answer to the question is zero kg and 0 grams.
When the water froze into ice it was expanding (thermal expanision) causing the 100 grams of ice to have a greater volume than 100 grams of water!
When the water froze into ice it was expanding (thermal expanision) causing the 100 grams of ice to have a greater volume than 100 grams of water!
Volume and Grams are different concepts. Grams Objects Volume Water
The volume of 112 grams of water is 112 ml.Pure water weighs 1 gram per milliliter (or cubic centimeter cc).
10 ml of water has 10 c.c. volume
100 grams of water
Does not compute! Grams is a measure of weight, ounces of water is a measure of volume.
100 grams of water at standard temperature and pressure has a volume of 100 cubic centimeters or 100 millilitres. The volume of 100 grams of any other substance will depend on its specific gravity or density: if less than that of water, it will have a greater volume; if greater than that of water, it will have a smaller volume.
If that is in water, 7m l
That is 454 ml.
Density = (mass) / (volume) = (33.6)/(14) = 2.4 gram/cc