About 1244 litres at STP, i.e. 1,244 m3.
This is calculated by using the Avogadro's law and the ideal gas law, which gives that water vapor will have the molar volume of 22,414 litre/mol at STP (with temperature of 273.15 K, i.e., 0o C). The molecular mass of water is 18,02 g/mol and the mass of one litre is about 1000 g.
Remember that steam is a gas; so it will expand to fill its container. Therefore, you must ask, how many cubic feet of steam at a certain pressure and temperature can one get. For example, at 500 pounds per square inch pressure and 470 degrees F, steam occupies 47 times the volume that it would as liquid water. So that 1 liter would be 47 liters of steam at that pressure and temperature. 47 liters is about 1.7 cubic feet. Of course, if you reduced the pressure by expanding the volume of the container, that amount of steam could occuply a lot more volume.
It takes 2.5 five-liter containers of water to make 2 liters.
You could fill the 7-liter bucket and pour water into the aquarium until it is full, but that would make too much sense. If you really need to have three liters, fill the 7-liter bucket (which, although unmarked, will be larger than the 4-liter bucket) and pour it into the 4-liter bucket. When the 4-liter bucket is full, there will be three liters remaining in the 7-liter bucket.
not quite. some of the molecules fit between each other.
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.
Okay so fill up the seven liter jug completely and pour as much as you can into the 4 liter jug. You now have 3 liters in the 7 liter jug and 4 liters in the 4 liter jug. Pour the 4 liter out half way, now you have 2 liters in the 4 liter jug. Now pour the contents of the 4 liter jug into the 7 liter jug that has 3 liters in it. You know have a jug with 5 liters.
Pour from the 7 liter container into the 5 liter container until their levels are equal. Both containers will then have 6 liters in them.
It takes about 7.57 1/2-liters to make one US gallon.
1,000 milliliters make 1 liter, so the liter has to be bigger.
5 liters
Five (5) times 0.2 of anything makes 1.0 whole one.
It's the other way around. One liter is one liter. One kiloliter is 1,000 liters. 1,000 milliliters make a liter.
1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter