1000 litres is, by definition equal to a cubic metre. As a result, 1 ml = 1 cm3. It isa consequence of the definition of a litre.
1 gm = 1cm3 = 1ml
1 cm3 = 1mL 1000ml per Litre Therefore 1000cm3 per Litre
The same way you determine the density of any other object. Divide the mass by the volume. Add: density = mass/volume = 5g/1mL = 5g/mL = 5g/cm3* *1mL = 1 cm3
12 cm3 (because 1 cm3 equals 1 milliliter
No. Mostly yes, but... 1 cc = 1 cm3 and 1 cm3 of water has a mass of 1 gram - NOT weight, which depends on the force of gravity. 1 litre = 1000 cc. So 1 L of water has a mass of 1 kg.
Yes. They're equal volumes.
1 gm = 1cm3 = 1ml
1 cm3 = 1mL 1000ml per Litre Therefore 1000cm3 per Litre
These measure different types of units, however 1 cm3 = 1ml. 1 cm3 = 1cc.
They are of equal volume; 1cc = 1cm3 = 1mL
Multiply by ' 1 ' to convert either unit to the other. They're identical volumes.
1 mL - A cc (cubic centimeter, cm3) and a mL (milliliter) are equal to each other in terms of volume.
1 centicube is 1 cm3.
1ml is 1/5 of a standard US teaspoon.
1 cm3 = 0.000001 m3 I.e. because there are 100cm in 1m then 1m3 = (100^3)cm3 or 1cm3 = (1/ 1000000) = 1 x 10^(-6) = 1 micro
1cc (cubic centimeter) and 1mL (milliliter) are the same volume.
The same way you determine the density of any other object. Divide the mass by the volume. Add: density = mass/volume = 5g/1mL = 5g/mL = 5g/cm3* *1mL = 1 cm3