Litres are a measure of volume therefore it would be 9 litres
You don't have to find the volume ! If gas is put into a closed container, it fills it. The volume of gas in a one liter tank is one liter.
If you fill the container up then Yes. Litres are a measure of volume, which remains the same regardless of what fluid or material you are describing.
Depends on the container... Milimeters and liter are different measurements. Liters is a volume measurement as in M^3 Milimeters is a length measurement as in M
A container holds volume.
Capacity is the volume of the container.
You don't have to find the volume ! If gas is put into a closed container, it fills it. The volume of gas in a one liter tank is one liter.
There is most likely a more efficient way to do this, but this is the best I can do for now.Notation: ( x , y ) where x is the amount of water in the 5-liter container and y is the amount of water in the 7-liter container1. Fill the five-liter container ( 5 , 0 )2. Pour the five-liter container into the seven-liter container ( 0 , 5 )3. Fill the five-liter container ( 5 , 5 )4. Fill the seven-liter container with the five-liter container, leaving 3 liters in the five-liter container ( 3 , 7 )5. Pour out the seven-liter container ( 3 , 0 )6. Pour the five-liter container into the seven-liter container ( 0 , 3 )7. Fill the five-liter container ( 5 , 3 )8. Fill the seven-liter container with the five-liter container, leaving 1 liter in the five-liter container ( 1 , 7 )9. Pour out the seven-liter container ( 1 , 0 )10. Pour the five-liter container into the seven-liter container ( 0 , 1 )11. Fill the five-liter container ( 5 , 1 )12. Pour the five-liter container into the seven-liter container ( 0 , 6 )
Fill the 5 litre container and empty it into the 9 litre one. Fill the 5 litre (again) and empty 4 litres into the 9 litre container. Now - empty the remaining litre into the 6 litre container. Finally re-fill the 5 litre container and empty into the 6 litre one - and you're done.
If you fill the container up then Yes. Litres are a measure of volume, which remains the same regardless of what fluid or material you are describing.
If you mean a cubical container, yes - that would be exactly one liter.
1 liter
The volume doubles
It depends on the size of the marbles and the dimensions of the one liter container. Most likely the sand would fill the void space between the marbles and the mixture would have a volume of one liter or slighty more.
Gases will expand or contract to the volume of the container they are in, so gases do. However, liquids have fixed volumes, so they do not. In other words, a liter of water will remain a liter of water whether it is in a bucket or a swimming pool. However, the same quantity of gas may have different volumes depending on the container.
Depends on the container... Milimeters and liter are different measurements. Liters is a volume measurement as in M^3 Milimeters is a length measurement as in M
Some unit of volume: e.g. liter, cup, gallon, deciliter.
9 quatre litre's will fill a 2 and a quatre litre can