There can be no answer. A litre is a measure of volume in 3-dimensional space while a cusec is a measure of the rate of flow. The two measure different things and, according to the basic rules of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
There are 1,000 liters in one quasic.
1cusec= 28.317 liters/sec 1gallon = 3.78 liters therefore 1 cusec=28.317/3.78 = 7.491 litres
1 cusec = 28.3 litres per second
One cusec is equal to 7.48 gallons (28.317 liters) of water flowing each second. It is equal to a volume of water one foot high and one foot wide flowing a distance of one foot in one second. 1 cusec is a measure of flow rate and is one cubic foot per second (28.317 liters ... a cusec is one cubic foot (28.32 L/s) per second ... 28.317 x 9000 =2,54,853 liter
Approximately 7.48 gallons equal 1 cubic foot. Since 1 cusec is equal to 448.83 gallons per minute, in one second it would be around 7.48 gallons.
A litre is a measure of volume in 3 dimensional space. A cusec is a measure of flow. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is a fundamentally flawed procedure.
Correct Question: How many litres are there in one cusec? Answer: A cusec (ceusic, cusic) contains a fluid flow of 28.314 litres per second.
Cusec is a volumetric unit for measuring the flow of liquids, equal to one cubic foot per second. (28.317 Ltrs of water). In other words, we can say that if one cubic foot of water crosses any hurdle or any barrier and even any gate of dam in one second it is called one cusec. It is flow measurement of the water. And secondly, if 28.317 liters of water cross the dame gate or any other barrier in one second it is called one cusec.
It is actually called a cusec (cubic feet per second), not cusic. It is a volumetric unit for measuring the flow of liquids, equal to one cubic foot per second.1 ft3s-1 = 0.028316847m3s-1, 1 ft3s-1 = 1 cusec
1 cusec = 28.316847 liter/secon
1 cusec, or 1 cubic foot per second, would be 7.48 gallons per second.
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