Fill the 7L (7L, 0L),Pour from 7L to 9L (0L, 7L),
Refill the 7L (7L, 7L),
Pour from 7L to 9L (5L, 9L),
Empty 9L (5L, 0L),
Pour from 7L to 9L (0L, 5L),
Refill the 7L (7L, 5L),
Pour from 7L to 9L (3L, 9L),
Empty 9L (3L, 0L),
Pour from 7L to 9L (0L, 3L),
Refill the 7L (7L, 3L),
Pour from 7L to 9L (1L, 9L).
Done!
Repeating Decimal can be expressed exactly using what
using a thermometer u can measure accurately at 1 decimal place
Using a protractor the measure of and angle is how many degrees around it is.
You could measure a skateboard in decimeters. Remember, 1dm=10cm.
It is exactly 34 by using long division
81 litres - without using a calculator !... assuming he's not drunk any himself !
There is no such thing as a "Canadian ounce" . We use the Imperial system of ounces and pounds or the Metric system of Kilograms . There are 35.195 ounces in a Litre. - 140.78 ounces in 4 litres.
Any fluid. Fluids are anything other than solids.
1 litre (or liter) equals 1000 milliliters (ml). Therefore, to convert an amount in litres to milliliters, multiply it by 1000. Using that method, you'll find that 1.24 litres equal 1240 milliliters.
You cannot. Each of the three containers has a capacity of an even number of litres. Their sums and differences will always be even. There is, therefore, no way to measure out an odd number of litres using them.
No, adding water to a solution does not change the molarity of the solute. The molarity of a solution is calculated using the amount of solute and the volume of the solution, so diluting with water only changes the volume, not the amount of solute present.
You cannot. A circle is a 2-dimensional object which has an area but no thickness and, therefore, no volume. A litre is a measure of volume. You cannot measure an object with no volume using units that are intended for volume.
Using metric measurements you would most commonly purchase car fuel or milk in "Litres" (or "Liters" American spelling).However, the base unit of volume is the cubic metre:-Where there are:-1000 cubic metres in a cubic kilometer1000 litres in a cubic metre.100 centileters in a litre.1000 millilitres in a litre.10 mililitres in a centilitreand:-- milliliter = ml-- cubic centimeter =cc-- liter =l
None. A gallon is roughly 4 litres or 8 pints. There are 1000 millilitres in one litre. When using units of measurement, it is best to work either in Metric (litres) OR in Imperial (gallons), but never both at once.
No. I cannot envisage any situation in which someone would want to measure the length of water!
1 liter weighs 0.96 kilograms. Only if it is water, at specific temperature and pressure. In general the question cannot be answered sensibly. A litre is a measure of volume, with dimensions [L3]. A kilogram is a measure of mass, with dimensions [M]. The two measure different things and basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information. As a simple mental exercise consider a litre of air and a litre of water. They will have very different masses.
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