i think approximately 800g of flour fits in a container meant for 1 liter of liquid (water).
About twice the size of a 2 liter soda bottle. Liquid nitrogen is extremely cold- the container must be vacuum insulated, or the liquid nitrogen quickly turn to gas.
filter funnel
funnel
i think a ten liter container at 800 degrees Celsius has more heat
The units are not directly comparable. This question has popped up in various forms HUNDREDS of times. There is no conversion from kilograms to liters or vice versa. The kilogram is a unit of mass, whereas the liter is a unit of volume or capacity. In order to determine the weight of a liter of something, you must know what that something is. A liter of propane will weigh less than a liter of water or a liter of liquid tungsten. This depends on the density of the liquid involved (usual units are grams per cm3, which mean kg per litre), but if the liquid is water then 1 liter weighs 1 kilogram at standard temperature and pressure. i.e. at 00C or 273K and 1 atm pressure.
About twice the size of a 2 liter soda bottle. Liquid nitrogen is extremely cold- the container must be vacuum insulated, or the liquid nitrogen quickly turn to gas.
That is 1/4 of a Kilogram. 1 litre of water weighs 1 kilogram
It's the volume of one kilogram of water in its liquid state.
1 liter
filter funnel
Ideally, one liter is usually equal to one kilogram and therefore a liter of flour would weigh one kilogram. This is the same as 2.2 pounds.
funnel
i think a ten liter container at 800 degrees Celsius has more heat
funnel
No, compost is bulky and will have air-spaces. So less compost can be packed into the litre container. Water is a liquid and will fill the container completely, and will be heavier.
There is most likely a more efficient way to do this, but this is the best I can do for now.Notation: ( x , y ) where x is the amount of water in the 5-liter container and y is the amount of water in the 7-liter container1. Fill the five-liter container ( 5 , 0 )2. Pour the five-liter container into the seven-liter container ( 0 , 5 )3. Fill the five-liter container ( 5 , 5 )4. Fill the seven-liter container with the five-liter container, leaving 3 liters in the five-liter container ( 3 , 7 )5. Pour out the seven-liter container ( 3 , 0 )6. Pour the five-liter container into the seven-liter container ( 0 , 3 )7. Fill the five-liter container ( 5 , 3 )8. Fill the seven-liter container with the five-liter container, leaving 1 liter in the five-liter container ( 1 , 7 )9. Pour out the seven-liter container ( 1 , 0 )10. Pour the five-liter container into the seven-liter container ( 0 , 1 )11. Fill the five-liter container ( 5 , 1 )12. Pour the five-liter container into the seven-liter container ( 0 , 6 )
pour it into a known liquid volumetric container. One liter will always be one litter no matter the viscosity or special gravity of the liquid