measure the height and dia of cyl. in cm. then calculate the area by PiXDXD/4. Volume =areaXheight in cubic cm. 1 lt =1000 cubic cm. Using this determine the volume in Lts.
No - kilograms are units of weight - not volume !
Kilogram is weight, not volume.
To calculate the volume of a tank, you multiply its length, width, and height. However, the height of the tank is not provided in your question. Assuming you have a height measurement, you can use the formula: Volume = Length × Width × Height. If the height is known, simply substitute the values into the formula to find the volume.
The answer depends on whether or not the tank has a geometric shape. If it has a shape that can be broken up into simply geometric shapes, each with a volume formula, you can calculate the volume of each section and add them together. Obviously that will not work with a random shape. In that case, you can fill the tank to capacity and then empty it out into measuring jars or flasks. Use the volume of the jars to calculate the volume of the tank.
- LTS: Like this status .
LTS ( Literacy Training Service)
measure the height and dia of cyl. in cm. then calculate the area by PiXDXD/4. Volume =areaXheight in cubic cm. 1 lt =1000 cubic cm. Using this determine the volume in Lts.
LTS stands for Long Term Support.
A liter is a measure of volume; we need to calculate the volume of the tank. For this we need to have all three measurements of the tank.
"Area" is an amount of flat surface. It has no volume. If the area is the bottom of a tank, then the volume of the substance in the tank is the area multiplied by the depth.
It depends on the shape of the tank.
If the volume of the tank was effectivelly constant, and the tank was sealed to prevent gas escaping, the pressure of the gas would increase.
To determine the density of the mixture, you need to calculate the total mass of the gases and divide it by the total volume of the tank. Density = total mass / total volume. To determine the specific volume of the mixture, you need to divide the total volume of the tank by the total mass of the gases. Specific volume = total volume / total mass. Once you have these calculations, you'll have the density and specific volume of the gas mixture in the tank.
The 20 foot by 40 foot cylindrical tank has a volume of 1005.7142857142849 cubic feet.
Its approximately 63-65 Lts. The fuel bars will go 0 at 50 lts bt the spare fuel is about 15 lts. More info available at ClubLogan.com forums
The volume of a fish aquarium can be calculated by multiplying the length, width, and height of the tank. Measure these dimensions in inches or centimeters, then multiply them together and convert the result to gallons for standard aquarium measurements.