That is approximately 30 ml.
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1/2 tsp
2 is the answer
Yes. In the US, the tablespoon as a unit of measure is about 15 ml; in Australia, 20 ml.
No, because is n=1, the electron is in the first energy level, therefore cannot have a l=2, because l= n-1. Or more simply put l=2 is a d-orbital, and there are no d-orbitals in the first energy level. ml=0 is correct because ml= +-l through 0.
2 litres/ 20 ml = 2000 ml / 20 ml = 2000/20 = 100 of them.