0.125 litres
Yes. There is twice as much oxygen in a liter jar.
6.7,6.8,6.4,5.9
Terminating decimals are decimals that end, such as, 2.384. Non-terminating decimals that don't end, such as, 0.3333333333.......
3rd. Adding Decimals 5th - Adding and subtracting 6th - Dividing Decimals
You can use decimals in money.
1 ml = 0.001 1 liter = 1000 ml
A liter is a liter. That is a tautology. ----------------------------------------------------------------- If the oxygen is in liquid form, then there is 1 litre in a 1 litre flask.
no
The oxygen sensor on a 1999 Oldsmobile Intrigue 3.3 liter is in the exhaust manifold/pipes
You divide the number of half-liters by 2.
Hemoglobin in blood carries about 280 ml of oxygen/ liter. That bond is tight enough to carry oxygen and loose enough to give at pressure gradient difference. If erythropoiesis does not occur in body you can carry only 4 ml / liter of oxygen/ liter in body and you will not survive with such a low supply of oxygen.
Yes. There is twice as much oxygen in a liter jar.
With a liter being 1.0 L, 3 milliliters is three-thousandths, or .003 L
0.5atm
Approx 180ml
20.95%oxygen and 78.08% nitrogen
36