Lead has a density of 11.34 grams/milliliter
Mercury has a density of 13.534 grams/milliliter
So, with out calculation, Density = grams/milliliters, we can see lead as having more volume. Do the calculations yourself.
The liter of mercury will weigh more (mercury is much more dense than water).
However, the measure is 1 liter (this is a measure of volume) for both and this means they will both have the SAME volume.
The 'liter' is a unit of volume.
All liters have the same volume, no matter what's in them.
Even if they're empty.
A litre is a litre, no matter the material.
Neither: the volume is 1 litre in each case.
Lead has a lower density, so 1g of lead.
103cc and both are eqal
A kiloliter is much bigger then a liter. If you have one kiloliter, then you have 1,000 kiloliters.
There are two units of measurement which are called 'gallon' 1 imperial gallon (uk) is equal to 4.54609188 litres 1 US gallon is equal to 3.78541178 litres I have to assume you want to compare a gallon and a liter of the same liquid. In this case a gallon will always be heavier than a liter. However if you compare for example a gallon of air with a liter of water, the liter of water will weigh more than the gallon of air.
The volume of 1 milliliter is 1 cubic centimeter.
Liter is a measure of volume and pound is a measure of weight, so it depends on the density of that material.
Metric units of volume include the cubic meter, cubic centimeter, cubic millimeter, milliliter, cubic kilometer, and liter. When used to express the volume of a space or object, the shape of the object is completely irrelevant.
Given an equal volume of each, mercury has by far the greater mass (weight) because its density is approximately 13.6gm/cc whereas water has a density of 1gm/cc; So the mercury is 13.6 times as heavy as water is.
they share the same volume. In the Metric system, Liters are a measurement of volume, not of weight. Therefore, 10 Liters of water would share the same volume as 10 Liters of Mercury.
The volume of 1 liter of water is 1 liter.
The standard unit of volume in the metric system is liter or litre. By using decimal prefixes we can arrive at smaller or larger units of measure. It is no coincidence that there is a relationship between liter as volume, meter as distance and water:1 liter = 1 cubic decimeter = 1 kilogram of water at 4° C.
lead and water will occupy the same volume. however the Density of lead is 207.2 g/L (grams per liter) and the Density of H2O is only 18.02 g/L so if you had the same volume of lead and water the lead would be heavier. But if you had the same Weight of both water and lead the water would have a larger volume.
None. The question is misguided. Mercury is mercury, and doesn't contain water.
No, volume and mass are related but they are not the same. As an example, 1 liter of water has a mass of 1 kg whereas 1 liter of mercury has a much higher mass. Mathematically, Mass divided by volume is equal to density. Mass has units of Kg and volume has units of m3.
These are different units. Liters is volume (3 dimensions) Kilo is short for kilogram which is mass. If you are measuring water (which conveniently has a density of 1.0) then 1 liter = 1 kilogram But if you have a liter of mercury then 1 liter = 13.6 kilograms
The standard unit of volume in the metric system is liter or litre. By using decimal prefixes we can arrive at smaller or larger units of measure. It is no coincidence that there is a relationship between liter as volume, meter as distance and water:1 liter = 1 cubic decimeter = 1 kilogram of water at 4° C.
A kiloliter is much bigger then a liter. If you have one kiloliter, then you have 1,000 kiloliters.
The weight would depend on the density of the liquid, as liter is a measure of volume. A liter of water weighs about 1 kg (2.2 pounds). A liter of mercury weighs about 13.5 kg (30 pounds).
cm squared is a measure of area.cm cubed is the measure of volume.1 liter = 1000 cm cubed.So 1 liter of water = 1000 cm3 of water.