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a volume in meter cube.. would like to know how to relate this to flow rate

2006-09-27 17:41:32 · 4 answers · asked by Joe 1 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

4 answers

Flow rate is volume per unit time. A good example is gallons per minute.

If 100 cubic meters is tranfered in 8 minutes, the flow rate is 100m^3 / 8 minute = 12.5m^3 per minute.

2006-09-27 17:47:05 · answer #1 · answered by Professor 3 · 0 0

The volume available in *** has to be known the time it takes to flow this volume, once defined then flow rate shall be volume /time like

10cum of water flowing in 2 hours, then flow rate will be 10/2=5cum per hour

2006-09-27 17:49:17 · answer #2 · answered by Fred 2 · 0 0

the relation is in time.

volume [meter cubic]
flow rate [meter cubic per time]

Just add another parameter time
time can be in second or minute or even an hour.

If your volume =10 meter cubic and flew in 10 second your flow rate is
10 m^3/10 s = 1m^3/s

2006-09-27 18:12:07 · answer #3 · answered by safrodin 3 · 0 0

rate is defined as the given quantity with respect to time. So the conversion from volume to flow rate would be as follows...

dV/dt=flow rate.... the derivative of volume with respect to time is the flow rate...

2006-09-27 17:48:40 · answer #4 · answered by venomfx 4 · 0 0

very confusing point. lookup on to google or bing. that can help!

2014-12-08 19:26:35 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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