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2006-11-26 07:25:31 · 6 answers · asked by NIGHTHAWK 1 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

6 answers

10,000 Litres of what?

1,000 Litres of water is a metric ton or 1, 000 kg.
So if yoiu have 10,000 Litres of water it will weigh 10 metric tonnes or 10,000 kg.

Different liquids, solids and gasses have different densities so 10,000 Litres of them will have different weights.

2006-11-26 07:28:53 · answer #1 · answered by balans_99 2 · 0 0

You can't convert a measure of volume (L) to a measure of weight (g) without knowing the density of the substance.

If the question is about water, which is generally assumed to have a density of 1 gram per mL, then 10L x 1000mL/L x 1g/mL = 10000g or 10kg.

But really unless you know what the density of the substance is, you can't calculate the weight from the volume.

2006-11-26 07:29:36 · answer #2 · answered by Jim Burnell 6 · 2 0

10.000L is assumed to be a volume. of 10 litres.
Volume cannot be converted to weight - it depends on the material being measured/weighed.

Using water - at room temperature at pressure (25 degrees C and 1 atmosphere pressure (760 mmHg) one litre of water weighs one kilogramme. Hence 10.000L of water would weigh 10.000 kilogrammes. (10kg)

2006-11-26 07:37:03 · answer #3 · answered by lenpol7 7 · 0 1

1 kg water = 1 litre,,,
10 kg =10 litre
1000 kg =1000 litre=1 tonne

2006-11-26 07:30:32 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

10 tonnes of water, multiply this by specific gravity or density of the medium in the 10000l

2006-11-27 03:40:42 · answer #5 · answered by lulu 6 · 0 0

10.000L of what?

2006-11-26 07:29:26 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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