Molasses has a density of 1.4 grams per millilitres = 1.4 kg per litre. Therefore, 10 kgs would have a volume of 10/1.4 = 7.14 litres, approx.
1 decimeter = 10 centimeters Volume = 10*10*10 = 1000 cubic cm = 1 litre
Litre is volume and millimeter is distance, so you cannot do that. perhaps you mean litre to millilitres? 1 litre = 1000 millilitres 10 milliiters/1000 milliliters = 1/100
The smallest unit is probably a cubic Planck's length, where the Planck's length is approx 1.6*10-35 metres or 1.6*10-29 mL. Of course, you could, in principle, have a tenth (or a thousandth) of that, but it will not be a measurable volume. The smallest unit of volume that you are likely to come across outside of a scientific lab is probably a picolitre = 10-12 Litre (a trillionth of a litre) which is the size of some of droplets used by some inkjet printers.
Assuming the last part of the question should have been 5 cm and not cm5, the volume is 20*10*5 = 1000 cubic centimetres = 1 litre.
10 x 20 x 0.06 = 12 litres. the density of glass varies. if we take a density of 2.6 kg/litre then 2.6 x 12 = 31.2 kg
A centimetre is a measure of length, not of volume. A litre is the volume of a cube whose sides are 10 decimetres.
Vol = 10*10*10 = 1000 cm3 = 1 Litre
Litre or liter is the volume equivalent to a cube of 10 cm x 10 cm x 10 cm, milli- prefix mean 1/1000 or 0.001 of such quantity, milliliter is the volume of 0.001 litre.
1 decimeter = 10 centimeters Volume = 10*10*10 = 1000 cubic cm = 1 litre
Litre is volume and millimeter is distance, so you cannot do that. perhaps you mean litre to millilitres? 1 litre = 1000 millilitres 10 milliiters/1000 milliliters = 1/100
10 ooo mL is equal to 10 L.The litre is an official unit for volume in SI.
The liter is a unit of volume in the metric system.
10 ooo cm3 is equal to 1o L.A litre is the volume unit for SI.
10 stones 16 pounds is equal to about 70.9 kgs.
0.0005m3 500ml is half a litre. There are 1000 litres in 1m3.
If you are 13, why would you care about 10 kgs in 1 month!?
No. A litre used to be defined as the volume of 1 kilogram ie 1000 (NOT 100) grams of pure water at a temperature of 4 degrees C (when it was at its most dense) and a pressure of 760 millimetres of mercury (standard atmospheric pressure). However, for the last half century, a litre has been defined as the volume of a 10 cm cube.