No, a liter contains 1000 cc
No, 1 liter = 1000 cubic centimeters.
1 liter is 1 cubic decimeter. 1 decimeter is 10 centimeters. 1 cubic decimeter is 10 centimeter times 10 centimeter times 10 centimeter. That is 1000 cubic centimeters. 1 liter is 1000 cubic centimeters.
One liter is equal to 1000 cubic centimeters, not 10. A liter is a standard unit of volume in the metric system, and it is equivalent to 1000 milliliters or 1 cubic decimeter.
A liter is one cubic decimeter-- i.e., a cube 10 centimeters on a side, or 1000 cubic centimeters total.
1 liter is 1 cubic decimeter. 1 decimeter is 10 centimeters. 1 cubic decimeter is 10 centimeter times 10 centimeter times 10 centimeter. That is 1000 cubic centimeter.
Liters is for volume, centimeters is for length. They don't convert.
The question was 'how many centimeters are 1000 cubic centimeters', and to say it would be a cube of side 10 cm is correct. This is also defined as 1 liter.
One cubic meter is equal to 100 linear centimeters cubed, which is 1,000,000 (one million) cubic centimeters. One litre is equal to 10 centimeters cubed, or 1,000 cubic centimeters. Therefore, there is 1/1000 (one thousandth) of a cubic meter in one litre.
There are 1000cc per liter: 6.23 x 1000 = 6230cc
A litre is a measure of volume, you can't have cubic litres
Two conversions are needed. One cubic centimeter is equal to 1 milliliter. So, 1 cubic decimeter is equal to 10 milliliters. 10 milliliters is equal to .01 liters. Then there are .01 liters per cubic decimeter.
1,000 Liters = 1,000,000 Cubic Centimeters