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No. It cannot be. Mass cannot be measured in cm3, which is a measure of volume.
Simple. The volume of a rectangle is 0. A rectangle is a two dimensional shape and therefore cannot have a volume.
It means that it is wrong because volume is measured in cubic units.
Volume is measured in decibals.
Density is a measure of mass per unit volume. Volume cannot be measured in centimetres and so this question makes no sense and cannot be answered.
No. A spirometer can be used to measure the volume of breath a person can expire but it is impossible to expire your entire lung capacity. This is due to the "dead space" capacity that remains to stop the collapse of the alveoli. As the alveoli are spherical and lined with mucus if they collapse it would be impossble for them to be filled again and so some air must remain within them. It is, however, possible to estimate someone's total lung capacity from the spirometer reading.
the spirometer
Respiratory volume or respiratory minute volume is the volume of air which can be inhaled or exhaled from a person's lung in one minute.It is normally consider when a person on a ventilator for breathing problem due to sickness or injury. It is calculated by taking the tidal volume( or lung volume ) and multiplying it by the respiratory rate( the number of breaths per minute a person is taking).
this is called residual volume.
FALSE
There can be no possible answer to this question. Volume cannot be measured in g. Mass cannot be measured in cm - nor can volume.
A spirometer is a common device use to measure breath. It is a simple instrument that measures the volume of air breathed in and out by the lungs.
spirometer
residual volume
false
Residual volume is the amount of air left in the lungs after a maximal exhalation
The specific resisitivity - also called residual or inherent resistivity - of a particular material (scientifically called its specific resistivity) is measured in ohms per unit volume. It can be determined by measuring the resistance of a test conductor having unit length and unit cross sectional area or some other accurately-measured volume of the material.