m = dV (d for density (even though greek letter rho should be used))
therefore m = (1.0 g/cm3)(5 L)
m = (1.0 g/cm3)(5 dm3) (since 1 L = 1 dm3)
m = (1.0 g/cm3)(5000 cm3) (since 1 dm3 = 1000 cm3)
m = 5000 g
m = 5 kg
2,000 cm³
The volume in liters of a 100mm long by 50mm diameter cylinder is: 0.196 liters.
1 dekaliter equals to 10 liters
517 centiliters is greater. 517cL = 5.17 liters
30 liters of a 10 % solution of fertilizer has .1(30) = 3 liters of fertilizer 1 liter of 30% solution has .3 liter of fertilizer 10 liters of 30% solution has 3 liters of fertilizer so, the chemist needs 10 liters of the 30% solution and 20 liters of water to make 30 liters of a 10% solution.
7 liters of a 20% acid solution consists of 1.4 liters of acid (20% of the total volume) mixed with 5.6 liters of water (80% of the total volume). The amount of acid isn't going to change in the new solution. You are just going to add enough water to make it a 10% solution instead of a 20% solution. So it will be more dilute. That means that 1.4 liters of acid will represent 1/10 of the volume of the new solution. So the total volume of the new solution will be 10 x 1.4 or 14 liters. The amount of water in the new solution will be 14 - 1.4 = 12.6 liters. That is a difference of 12.6 - 5.6 = 7 liters from the amount of water you started with. So you need to add 7 liters of water to the original 20% solution to make it a 10% solution. This makes sense because if you double the amount of the mixture from 7 liters to 14 liters and the amount of acid is unchanged, the solution will be half as strong.
0.75 kg/L
It doesn't matter whether a container has the form of a cylinder, or some other shape. Liters is a measure of volume, kilogram is a measure of mass. Therefore, to convert from liters to kilograms, you have to know the density of the substance you will put into the container. Different substances have different densities, i.e., they can have more or less kilograms per liter. For example, water has a density of 1 (kilogram per liter), while lead has a density of 11, and gold 19 (approximately).It doesn't matter whether a container has the form of a cylinder, or some other shape. Liters is a measure of volume, kilogram is a measure of mass. Therefore, to convert from liters to kilograms, you have to know the density of the substance you will put into the container. Different substances have different densities, i.e., they can have more or less kilograms per liter. For example, water has a density of 1 (kilogram per liter), while lead has a density of 11, and gold 19 (approximately).It doesn't matter whether a container has the form of a cylinder, or some other shape. Liters is a measure of volume, kilogram is a measure of mass. Therefore, to convert from liters to kilograms, you have to know the density of the substance you will put into the container. Different substances have different densities, i.e., they can have more or less kilograms per liter. For example, water has a density of 1 (kilogram per liter), while lead has a density of 11, and gold 19 (approximately).It doesn't matter whether a container has the form of a cylinder, or some other shape. Liters is a measure of volume, kilogram is a measure of mass. Therefore, to convert from liters to kilograms, you have to know the density of the substance you will put into the container. Different substances have different densities, i.e., they can have more or less kilograms per liter. For example, water has a density of 1 (kilogram per liter), while lead has a density of 11, and gold 19 (approximately).
Depends on the density of the substance in question.
Multiply by density
Assuming the medium is fresh water with density 1 g/cc or 1 kg/liter then 21.65 liters = 21.65 kilograms
depends on the density of the liquid in question. 25 liters of water will be heavier than 25 liters of gasoline.
30 Liters of water weighs 30 kilograms. Other substances have different densities and weights.
75 kilos if density of the liquid is 1g/ml
It would depend on the density of the substance. Litres measure volume; kg measure weight.
You need to know the density but if that is 1 (based on density of water), then 464.5 litres is 464.5kg
it depends upon the density of the juice. mass=density*volume so when you multiply density of the juice by 20 you will get your answer.
A kilogram equals a litre, IF density is 1 g/ml