These measurement can not be converted, because litres are a measure of volume and meters are a measure of distance.
Liters IS volume - there is nothing to convert.
If you ignore the direction of the velocity and only consider its size, then you have speed.
Cubic feet is a measure of volume; kilogram is a unit of mass. You don't convert that.Cubic feet is a measure of volume; kilogram is a unit of mass. You don't convert that.Cubic feet is a measure of volume; kilogram is a unit of mass. You don't convert that.Cubic feet is a measure of volume; kilogram is a unit of mass. You don't convert that.
the tangential velocity is equal to the angular velocity multiplied by the radius the tangential velocity is equal to the angular velocity multiplied by the radius
You cannot. Velocity has nothing to do with volume and information on area, by itself, is not enough to determine the volume.
These measurement can not be converted, because litres are a measure of volume and meters are a measure of distance.
They have chambers that convert pressure energy into velocity energy.
Liters IS volume - there is nothing to convert.
If you ignore the direction of the velocity and only consider its size, then you have speed.
To convert acceleration units to velocity units, you need to integrate acceleration over time. If acceleration is constant, you can use the equation: velocity = acceleration x time. Make sure the units for acceleration are compatible with the units for time to get the velocity in the desired units.
Area and volume are not equivalent, so you cannot convert one to the other.
sigh..really?? gallons is a volume in ftt. thus you cannot convert an AREA into a VOLUME, because ft2 does not equal ft3!! you can convert the volume of a cube into gallons though...
Depends on the internal diameter, and the flow velocity. Velocity of water = Delta V Internal Radius= R RxRxV= Volume
Cm can't be converted to a volume.
36 ml IS a volume
To convert mass to volume, you need to know the density of the material. The formula for this calculation is: Volume = Mass / Density. This formula allows you to determine how much space a specific mass of a substance will occupy based on its density.