Well, darling, if the tank has sides of 5 meters, then it's a simple calculation to find the volume of the cube - just multiply 5 by 5 by 5. That gives you 125 cubic meters. And since 1 cubic meter is equal to 1000 liters, you're looking at a grand total of 125,000 liters of water in that bad boy. Cheers to staying hydrated!
the sides of the cubical box would be 7 meters
This depends entirely upon the maximum capacity of your kettle. It should tell you on the side.
Yes.
1 000 000 cubes would be held. 1 000 litres of water.
125,000,000,000
27000 mL
the sides of the cubical box would be 7 meters
It is 0.015625 millilitres.
1000 - with a little space left over.
Approximately 1667 cubical grains of NaCl would equal one millimeter, assuming each grain has a side length of 1 mm.
10
This depends entirely upon the maximum capacity of your kettle. It should tell you on the side.
A cube 46.4 meters or 152 feet on a side is required to hold 100 million liters of water.
There are 100 centimetres in a metre. So, if the water can be considered as solid cubes each one centimetre along each side then a line of 100 would cover the width of the container. A square 100 wide by 100 deep would cover the base of the container. A further 99 layers would fill the container. So now we have 100 x 100 x 100, or 1,000,000 cubes of water each 1 cm3 in volume As 1 cm3 is 1 millilitre, which is 1/1000 of a litre, then 1,000 litres would fill the container.
Yes.
That is a lot of oil. You will need a "large" tank. If you need a tank to fit that amount of oil, you should search for tanks based on that criteria. For reference, that amount of oil would fit in a cubical tank 3.3 meters on a side.
1 000 000 cubes would be held. 1 000 litres of water.