Uh, in liters? I'm not exactly sure what this question is asking...do you mean the units? or exactly how to measure it? Because if you want to measure water, I'd say use a measuring cup...
Its is a cup
I wiil use water
Your mind! Ha Ha.
Measuring cup
The volume of a typical glass of juice is 250 mL.
In order to measure the volume of an orange juice container , you would first measure the length, width, and height. Then you would multiply the length times the width. Once you've gotten the answer to that, multiply the result by the height. Thats your volume.
You cannot find the volume of Orange juice with knowing the size of what storage or container it is put it. Volume is the amount of 3-dimensional space occupied by an object. You cannot randomly calculate it. For example if it was in a glass you could measure the volume by: Vol of hemisphere is 2/3 Pi r^3 Find the vol inside ( r = 22) Find the vol out side ( r = 22 + 0.75) Find the difference = glass before the pattern is cut Find 95% of this = glass remaining r=raduis
Take a glass of orange juice and drink it!
You measure volume in a measuring jug, or when you are trying to put your mother pet chihuahua in an orange juice carton.
The time it takes for ice to melt in orange juice will vary depending on factors such as the temperature of the orange juice, the size of the ice cubes, and the environment. In general, ice will melt faster in a warmer liquid like orange juice compared to a colder liquid. It can take anywhere from a few minutes to half an hour for ice to fully melt in orange juice.
Orange juice does not change volume when it is poured into a different container. Volume will change if the juice undergoes a process such as concentration.
it depends, wat kind of orange juice? the one in the can or freshly squeezed
-- The height and diameter of the glass can best be described in centimeters. -- The thickness of the glass can best be described in millimeters. -- The total volume of the glass, as well as the volume of grapefruit juice, can best be described in milliliters. -- The temperature of the grapefruit juice can best be described in Kelvins (degrees Celsius). -- The specific gravity of the juice is dimensionless. -- The acidity of the juice is best described in terms of its 'pH'.
No
yes
There is no medical reason for orange juice. Important is only volume of any juice you like.