1 liter of water has nominally 1 kilogram of mass.
1 metric ton = 1,000 kilograms
1 cubic meter = 1,000 liters
So 1 cubic meter of water would be 1 metric ton of mass.
Length . . . meter Mass . . . kilogram Time . . . second Volume . . . cubic meter
A cubic meter of TNT has a mass of about 1650 kg.
Length . . . meter Volume . . . cubic meter, liter Mass . . . . kilogram
length: meter volume: cubic meter mass: kilogram
They are all Metric measurements.
One tonn
If it was a cubic meter of water then its mass would be 1000 kg or 1 metric ton.
Depends. A cubic meter of WHAT? If it's a cubic meter of lead, it would weigh quite a bit. A cubic meter of air, not so much. The standard substance that is used to relate metric measurements to each other is water. The "gram" was defined as the mass (not weight, but similar) of one cubic centimeter of water at normal temperature. There are 1 million cubic centimeters in a cubic meter, so a cubic meter of water would have a mass of 1 million grams, or 1,000 kilograms, or 1 metric ton. To obtain the mass of 1 cubic meter of some other substances, simply multiply the specific gravity of the substance by the mass of a cubic meter of water.
A cubic meter is a unit of volume; a metric ton is a measure of mass. Depending on what is in a particular cubic meter, the mass may vary between close to zero (in a vacuum), and billions of tons (in a neutron star). For example, a cubic meter of water has a mass of 1 ton, a cubic meter of lead, about 11 tons, a cubic meter of gold, about 19 tons. In every case, you have to multiply the volume with the density of whatever fills the cubic meter.A cubic meter is a unit of volume; a metric ton is a measure of mass. Depending on what is in a particular cubic meter, the mass may vary between close to zero (in a vacuum), and billions of tons (in a neutron star). For example, a cubic meter of water has a mass of 1 ton, a cubic meter of lead, about 11 tons, a cubic meter of gold, about 19 tons. In every case, you have to multiply the volume with the density of whatever fills the cubic meter.A cubic meter is a unit of volume; a metric ton is a measure of mass. Depending on what is in a particular cubic meter, the mass may vary between close to zero (in a vacuum), and billions of tons (in a neutron star). For example, a cubic meter of water has a mass of 1 ton, a cubic meter of lead, about 11 tons, a cubic meter of gold, about 19 tons. In every case, you have to multiply the volume with the density of whatever fills the cubic meter.A cubic meter is a unit of volume; a metric ton is a measure of mass. Depending on what is in a particular cubic meter, the mass may vary between close to zero (in a vacuum), and billions of tons (in a neutron star). For example, a cubic meter of water has a mass of 1 ton, a cubic meter of lead, about 11 tons, a cubic meter of gold, about 19 tons. In every case, you have to multiply the volume with the density of whatever fills the cubic meter.
1 liter water weighs 1 kg. The metric system was developed around the weight of water. 1 cubic meter of water is therefore also a mass of water a meter by a meter by a meter and weighs 1 metric ton or 1000 kg.
Mass . . . kilogram Capacity . . . cubic meter
-- 1 cubic meter of space is 1,000 liters of space. -- 1 liter of water has 1 kilogram of mass. -- 1,000 liters of water has 1,000 kilograms of mass = 1 metric ton -- 1 metric ton of water fills 1 cubic meter of space. -- A substance with a specific gravity of 2.7 packs 2.7 times as much mass into the same space. -- 2.7 metric tons of it pack into 1 cubic meter of space. -- The number of cubic meters it occupies is (the number of metric tons)/2.7 . -- For ANY substance, the number of cubic meters it fills is (the # of metric tons)/(specific gravity) .
Length: meter Volume: cubic meter Mass: kilogram
Length . . . meter Mass . . . kilogram Time . . . second Volume . . . cubic meter
Length: meter Mass: kilogram Volume: cubic meter
One cubic meter of water is one thousand kilograms.
Mass: kilogram Length: meter Volume: cubic meter (this is not a base unit, since it is derived from the meter)