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.
1 liter of oxygen weighs approximately 1.43 grams.
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.
With a liter being 1.0 L, 3 milliliters is three-thousandths, or .003 L
Yes. There is twice as much oxygen in a liter jar.
Approx 180ml
There is more oxygen in seawater. Seawater contains around 5 to 10 milligrams of oxygen per liter, while the concentration of oxygen in the air is about 210 milligrams per liter. However, the total amount of oxygen in the oceans is much higher due to their vast volume.
20.95%oxygen and 78.08% nitrogen