A litre is a litre, no matter what it's of. They're the same.
A liter is a unit of volume, equal to a cubic decimeter. If you are accustomed to U.S. measurement, a liter is a bit more than a quart.A liter is a unit of volume, equal to a cubic decimeter. If you are accustomed to U.S. measurement, a liter is a bit more than a quart.A liter is a unit of volume, equal to a cubic decimeter. If you are accustomed to U.S. measurement, a liter is a bit more than a quart.A liter is a unit of volume, equal to a cubic decimeter. If you are accustomed to U.S. measurement, a liter is a bit more than a quart.
Yes, that is correct. This is because the water molecules in liquid form are more densely packed compared to the same volume of ice, which has a more open structure due to the arrangement of molecules in a crystalline lattice.
Oh, dude, a liter is a liter, whether it's filled with water or mercury. Like, it's a unit of volume, not some magical potion that changes size based on what you pour into it. So, yeah, a liter of water and a liter of mercury have the same volume, my friend.
Cold water with high salinity takes up more volume than warm water than low salinity
a bath tub is a milliliter because a liter is the size of a water bottle
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.
The liter (or more properly litre) is a metric unit of volume.
B
It is easiest to observe the volumes of the two and go from there. One liter of water is most easily observed by most students as exactly half of a two liter of soda. Water and soda have a similar density (mass divided by volume) so they will have a similar mass. Then compare the volume of 1 liter to the volume of a dinosaur. I believe even most baby dinosaurs were larger than a liter. Take into account that most land animals alive will have a density not too far from water (some people float and some sink). The animals that have a density that differs greatly from water will more often than not have a higher density than water and sink. So, because a dinosaur is SIGNIFICANTLY more voluminous than a liter, and we can speculate that they were at least the density of water if not more, its very safe to say that dinosaurs had many times the mass of 1 liter of water.
A liter is not a unit of weight. A liter is a unit of volume (equal to one cubic decimeter).
A liter is a measure of volume, a millimeter a measure of length. There is not comparison
1.5 liter of water weighs 52.91094 ounces. Water I said. Wine is more than water. 64 ounces are in a magnum 1.5 liter has a volume of 50.72103305 fluid ounces.