Convertir Centímetro cúbico en Galón (EE.UU.)
Proporcione los valores a continuación para convertir centímetro cúbico [cm^3] a galón (US) [gal (US)], o viceversa .
Centímetro cúbico
Definición: El centímetro cúbico (símbolo: cm 3 ) es una unidad de volumen derivada del SI basada en el metro cúbico. Es el volumen de un cubo con medidas 1 cm × 1 cm × 1 cm, y es igual a 1/1,000,000 de un metro cúbico, 1/1,000 de un litro, o 1 mililitro. Las abreviaturas de cc y ccm también se utilizan a veces para denotar un centímetro cúbico, pero su uso está en desuso en el Sistema Internacional de Unidades (SI).
Historia/origen: El centímetro cúbico se derivó del metro cúbico, usando un prefijo SI, en este caso "centi", para denotar un submúltiplo de la unidad base.
Uso actual: el centímetro cúbico se usa en muchas disciplinas científicas, a menudo en forma de mililitros (símbolo: ml). Aunque el centímetro cúbico se basa en la unidad de volumen del SI, los ml (y sus múltiplos) se usan más comúnmente como medida de volumen que el centímetro cúbico. Los campos médico y automotriz de los Estados Unidos son una excepción a esto, y el centímetro cúbico todavía se usa ampliamente en estos campos. En contraste, el Reino Unido usa centímetros cúbicos en el campo médico, pero no en el automotriz.
Galón (EE. UU.)
Definición: A gallon is a unit of volume specifically regarding liquid capacity in both the US customary and imperial systems of measurement. The US gallon is defined as 231 cubic inches (3.785 liters). In contrast, the imperial gallon, which is used in the United Kingdom, Canada, and some Caribbean nations, is defined as 4.54609 liters. In both systems, the gallon is divided into four quarts. Quarts are then divided into two pints and pints are divided into two cups. A cup is comprised of two gills, making one gallon equal four quarts, eight pints, sixteen cups, or thirty-two gills. Further differentiating the US and the imperial gallon, a US gill is divided into four fluid ounces, while an imperial gallon is divided into five. A US fluid ounce is therefore 1/128 of a US gallon while an imperial fluid ounce is 1/160 of an imperial gallon.
History/origin: The term gallon most closely originates from "galon" in Old Northern French and developed as a system for measuring wine and beer in England, resulting in measures such as the wine gallon, ale gallon, and imperial gallon.
Current use: In the United States (US), gallons are often used for larger containers, such as half gallon tubs of ice cream or one-gallon cartons of milk. Gallons are also widely used in fuel economy expression in the US, as well as some of its territories. The imperial gallon is used even more sparingly than the US gallon, with most countries around the world using liters when referencing fuel.
Cubic Centimeter to Gallon (US) Conversion Table
Cubic Centimeter [cm^3] | Gallon (US) [gal (US)] |
---|---|
0.01 cm^3 | 2.6417205235815E-6 gal (US) |
0.1 cm^3 | 2.64172E-5 gal (US) |
1 cm^3 | 0.0002641721 gal (US) |
2 cm^3 | 0.0005283441 gal (US) |
3 cm^3 | 0.0007925162 gal (US) |
5 cm^3 | 0.0013208603 gal (US) |
10 cm^3 | 0.0026417205 gal (US) |
20 cm^3 | 0.005283441 gal (US) |
50 cm^3 | 0.0132086026 gal (US) |
100 cm^3 | 0.0264172052 gal (US) |
1000 cm^3 | 0.2641720524 gal (US) |
How to Convert Cubic Centimeter to Gallon (US)
1 cm^3 = 0.0002641721 gal (US)
1 gal (US) = 3785.411784 cm^3
Example: convert 15 cm^3 to gal (US):
15 cm^3 = 15 × 0.0002641721 gal (US) = 0.0039625808 gal (US)