If you are thinking of obsolete measures, then a quart is similar to a litre.
because capacity is mass and also amount of liquid
None really. If sent to the International Space Station, objects would have no weight but concave ones would have some capacity. Those same objects, back on the surface of the earth would have some weight but the same capacity as before. In stronger gravitational fields, the weight would continue to increase but there would be no change in the capacity.
Specific heat capacity
No two units of matter can occupy the same space at once. This is one of the primary properties of matter.
A litre is a unit of capacity. A centimetre is a unit of length. The two units are therefore incompatible.
The material with lower specific heat capacity will experience a greater temperature increase compared to the material with higher specific heat capacity when absorbing the same amount of energy by heat flow.
The two units are mass and weight and I can't answer the equal amount
A centimetre is a unit of distance. A millilitre is a unit of capacity. The two units are therefore incompatible.
True-
Think of it this way,there are 1000cc to one litre (Think of a cars engine capacity measure ment) and there is also 1000 ml to a litre,the two units of measurement equate to being the same as each other.That's the way I remember it. Blood is usually in units of CC
Each substance has a different heat capacity, which means they need different amounts of energy to change temperature by the same amount (for a given mass). If the same amount of energy is input, then the temperature difference will also be different.
A byte is a unit of capacity. A megahertz is a unit of frequency. The two units are incompatible.