There are 4.0 liters in 4.0 cubic decimeters. This is because 1 cubic decimeter is equal to 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 is no single formula. It depends on what units you start with and what units you want to convert to. Some times the conversion is not valid, that is, it makes no sense. Using dimensional analysis. Take the starting unit and use conversion rates you are familiar with to get to the unit you are trying to convert to. An example is below. Here we want to convert from feet to meters. Most don't remember that 1 ft = 0.3048 meters, but many know 1 in = 2.54 cm. Along with that, nearly everyone knows 1 ft = 12 cm and there are 100 cm in a meter. So breaking down what we know in order, we get the following equation, which allows us to convert from feet to meters. Algebraic Steps / Dimensional Analysis1 ft*12 in 1 ft*2.54 cm 1 in*1 m 100 cm=0.3048 m
There are 354 cubic centimeters in 0.354 liters. This is because 1 liter is equal to 1000 cubic centimeters. By converting liters to cubic centimeters, you multiply the liter value by 1000.
There is no direct conversion between square meters and liters since they are units for measuring different things. Square meters measure area (two-dimensional space), while liters measure volume (three-dimensional space).
You cannot. A square metre is a measure of area, in 2 dimensions. A cubic metre is a measure of volume in 3 dimensions. It makes no sense to try to convert from one to the other.
You cannot. Cubic metre per second is a measure of flow while cubic decameters is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and it makes no sense to try to convert from one to the other.
The question does not have any sensible answer. A cubic foot is a measure of volume, while a foot is a measure of distance. It makes absolutely no sense to even try to convert from one to the other.
There are 444 cubic inches in a 7.3 liter powerstroke diesel. The measurement is 1 liter = 61 ci. Which makes a 7.3 = 445, but I am assuming that a 7.3 is a round off of 7.278 liters, since 7.3 is easier to say.
Nothing. A cubic metre is a measure of volume in 3 dimensional space. A square metre is a measure of area in 2 dimensional space. The two measure different things and it makes no sense to try and convert from one to the other.
The other way round: 1 cubic metre is 1000 litres
Apart from calculating the volume, you would also have to know the density. Then, multiply the volume by the density.For example: A cubical water tank has 2 meters on every side. That makes for a volume of 8 cubic meters.The density of water is 1000 kg / cubic meter, so in the end result you have (8 cubic meters) x (1000 kg / cubic meter) = 8000 kg.