I think you are measuring your brain
2007-04-05 03:40:19
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The numpty who said 100cubic cms of water is a ton is a bit barmy.
Obviously the real answer depend upon what it is in the 9 cubic centimetres as many people have previously said but for water....
a 1000cubic cm box ie 10cm x 10cm x 10 cm would hold exactly 1 litre and weigh (remember this is just for water!) exactly 1 kg. This tells us that 1 cubic cm would weigh 1 gramme and therfore 9 cubic cm would weigh 9 grammes.
2007-04-05 17:18:59
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answer #2
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answered by charlie 2
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A cubic centemeter is a measure of volume, whereas grams are measured in mass.
you can equate the two by knowing the density of the substance measured.
Density = Mass/Volume.
Water has a density of approx 1 g/cm3 (varying by temperature)
2007-04-05 16:33:55
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answer #3
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answered by Mr Scientist 2
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Centimeters is distance - grams is weight and the volume that 9x9x9 will take is 729 cubic centimeters, but what fills that volume is dependant on the density of the matirials
2007-04-05 10:32:26
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answer #4
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answered by superliftboy 4
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Depends on the specific gravity of the material. Water, with a SG of 1 would weigh 9 gm.
2007-04-05 10:37:06
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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9 cubic centimetres of what.
A 100 cubic Cm's of water weigh a tonne.
2007-04-05 10:33:02
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answer #6
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answered by M1 5
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9 cubic centimeters of what? if it's water then it weighs 27g
2007-04-05 11:58:48
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answer #7
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answered by Chris S 3
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That depends upon the substance measured. Air is light, while platinum is dense, so 9cc of platinum has much more mass than 9cc of air. Platinum is 11% denser than gold, and gold is nearly twice as dense as lead. Gold is 19.3 times as dense as water.
2007-04-05 10:36:57
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answer #8
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answered by miyuki & kyojin 7
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You may be slightly muddled
cubic centmeters are measure of volume
grams are a measure of mass {weight]
SORRY!
you cannot equate one with the other without more facts or data
2007-04-05 12:19:17
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answer #9
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answered by Rod Mac 5
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Almost anything depending on what is in the volume (air, water, lead) to be measured for mass (grams.)
2007-04-05 10:31:48
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answer #10
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answered by Mike1942f 7
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This is why people should not provide kids with homework answers on here. You can all see that this kid obviously cannot construct a complete sentence.
2007-04-05 10:46:31
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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