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Sorry, you can only convert 1 metric ton of water to cubic meters (not square meters). Square meters are an area and cubic meters are a volume.
The number of cubic meters in a metric ton depends on the density of the material. To convert metric tons to cubic meters, you would need to know the density of the material in question. The formula to calculate this is volume = mass / density.
Square meters measure area, while cubic meters measure volume. To convert square meters to cubic meters, you would need to know the height or depth of the area you are measuring in order to calculate the volume. You would multiply the square meters by the height in meters to get the cubic meters.
There is no standard conversion for that. A cubic meter is a unit of volume. A ton is a unit of mass. The relationship between the two is:mass = volume x densityYou need to know the density of a specific substance, to convert from tons to cubic meters. The conversion will only be valid for that specific substance.
Gold has a density of approximately 19 times the density of water. A metric ton of water has a volume of 1 cubic meter. If you divide the number of tons by 19, you'll get the volume of the gold, in cubic meters.
There is no such thing as a "cubic ton". There is the ton as a unit of mass (1 ton = 1000 kg), and there is the cubic meter, a unit of volume.
When you're playing a music. Try to look for the volume bar and see what number is that. Thank you.
The volume of soil in a metric ton can vary greatly depending on the composition and density of the soil. On average, 1 metric ton of soil may occupy around 0.7 to 1.2 cubic meters.
One metric ton of plain water has a volume of about 35.32 cubic feet.
As written the question is incomplete as: tonnes are a measure of mass; whereas cubic meters are a measure of volume. However, mass and volume are related for every substance by density: density = mass / volume → volume = mass / density. So if you know the density of the substance that makes up the 10,000 tonnes in tonne/m³ and divide it into the 10,000 tonnes you will get the volume in cubic meters that the substance occupies.
There is no such thing as a "cubic ton". You can have cubic meters, but not cubic tons.