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  1. Volume, Capacity and Mass Capacity refers to the amount a container can hold and is usually associated with liquid. Common capacity measurements are millilitres and litres.

  2. Remember that volume is the amount of space occupied by an object or substance and capacity is the amount an object will hold. We can use displacement to calculate both volume and capacity.

  3. Remember that volume is the amount of space occupied by an object or substance and capacity is the amount an object will hold. We can use displacement to calculate both volume and capacity.

  4. Volume and capacity – metric and imperial. Most measurements used today in the UK (and in almost every country in the world apart from the USA) are metric, such as kilograms, metres and litres. They are based on the decimal number system, meaning that multiples of units are 10s, 100s or 1,000s.

  5. CALCULATOR ALLOWED. lu. Work out the density of the marble, in g/cm3. 2. k of wood has a density of 0.75 g/cm3 and a volum. o. Work out the mass of the block of wood, in grams. 3. brick has a density of 500 kg/m3 and a m. ss. Work out the volume of the brick, in m3. 4. A metal rod has a mass of 150 grams and a volume of 25 m3.

  6. Volume, Capacity and Mass Mass measures how much matter is in an object. We usually measure this by finding out what the object weighs. Mass and weight are slightly different but we often use weight terms when we are talking about day to day mass measurements. Common measurements are grams (g), kilograms (kg) and tonnes (t).

  7. • Uses appropriate unit to measure volume, capacity and mass • Reads scale interval points on a 1 litre jug in litres and millilitres • Converts between metric and imperial measurements of capacity