Answer:
Density of the fuel is 727.3 kilograms per cubic meter.
Specific weight of the fuel is 7127.3 Newtons per cubic meter.
Specific gravity of the fuel is 0,727.
Explanation:
In order to use SI units, we have to convert liters to cubic meters. Knowing that a liter is a cubic decimeter and a cubic decimeter is cubic meters, we know that the tank has 0,055 cubic meters of fuel (because it is full).
Now that we have things in SI units, we calculate density:
Knowing the mass per unit of volume, we can calculate weight per unit of volume thanks to Newton's second law (mass times acceleration, g in this case, equals force (weight)), i.e. specific weight:
With density we can also calculate how dense the fuel is related to a reference (water), i.e. specific gravity. SG is a dimensionless number that tell us how much denser (SG>1) or lighter per unit of volume (SG<1) a substance is than water. We use water as a reference because it is one of the most used substances in our life, and it is a standard density (1000 kg per cubic meter at 4°C and 1 atm).