It rather depends on the size of the bottle. For instance, a one litre capacity bottle will hold one litre of liquid.
1 centilitre = 0.01 litres (or one hundredth of a litre)
One tenth of a litre is 0.1 litre. A litre is 1 000millilitres, so 0.1l is 100ml. There is a unit that equals one tenth of a litre, the decilitre, but it isn't widely used.
1 litre = 1000 millilitres so 1 litre is gonna be 1 millilitre of one thousandth of a litre.
It is approx 3.82*10^26 Joules.
Approximately 34.2 million joules (J) of energy can be released from burning one liter of petrol.
First off you would need to know the energy value of the oil, that is the amount of energy released during the combustion of a specified amount of the oil, eg kj/mol. The energy value for paraffin is around 46Mj/kg. 46 megajoules per kilogram, or 46million joules. One tonne is one thousand kilograms, so one tonne of paraffin would contain 46 thousand megajoules, or 46 gigajoules (46Gj).
One gallon of oil is 6-8 pounds depending on density. If you assume SAE 10W-30 oil; density is 875 grasm/litre = 1.929 pounds per litre = 7.3 pounds per US gallon.Assume SAE 10W-30 oil; density is 875 grasm/litre = 1.929 pounds per litre = 7.3 pounds per US gallon. Cheers Malcolmat .9 grams/ milliliter, one gallon of oil weighs 3.4 kilograms
Hi there,One fiftieth of a litre is 20ML.So for example, if its for a 2stroke bike/boat engine, you would mix 20ml of 2 stroke oil, to every litre of fuel.Hope this helps.
There are many quality levels of edible oil. One of the cheapest is Canola oil and here in Canada this is about $3 per litre. - Extra Virgin Olive oil is about $15 per litre. There are many in between.
1,000 ml in a litre
0.1 litre
One litre of oil weighs about 0.92 kilograms. This is because the density of oil is usually about 0.92 grams per millilitre.
It rather depends on the size of the bottle. For instance, a one litre capacity bottle will hold one litre of liquid.
1/10×1litre , since 1 litre is 1000ml therefore , 1/10×1000 is 100 ml here is this
There are 3.6 million joules in one kilowatt-hour (kWh).
That depends on the specific weight of that special oil. Only for pure water one can say: 1 litre of water weighs 1 kilogram. Not oil.