Yes. It is the standard for density. #
1 gram of pure water at 25 oC and 760 mmHg (STP) occupies a volume of 1 mL.
All other densities are measured against this standard.
Yes.
1g=1mL
Well, it depends. One liter of what? If it is water, it is one kg, since for water 1ml = 1g. 1 liter (water) = 1000 grams
assuming a density of 1g/ml, then 250g
110 grams 1 milliliter of water is 1g. 100 of them is 100g plus a ten gram container is 110g
urine weight is more than distilled water due to the dissolved solutes in it
What is the relationship between 1g 1ml and 1cc of water at STP?
1L = approx 1Kg therefore 1ml = 1g so 400ml = 400g
Only with water. 1ml of water is equal to one gram of water; this is how the measurement systems are classified.
1 ml=1ml. 1ml OF water=1g of water. 1L=1000mL
water is a unique substance that: 1g=1mL=1cm3
2.465, assuming that 1g=1ml (density of 1)
1g of water is in theory equal to 1ml, so 1kg (in theory)
1ML === ===
The same density of 1ml of water. (approx 1g/ml)
1mL of water weighs almost exactly 1g, although this differs with temperature. {| ! | For more data, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_(molecule) |}
1g=1ml so 50 ml :)
yes