A little known hint is that for practical and kitchen usage, grams, millilitres and cc are all basically the same. This is because they all derive from the litre, which is a kilogram of water at median temperature. A litre is 1,000 ml and of course a kilo is 1,000 grams. A kilo of water occupies 1,000 cubic centimetres of volume. This does, of course change when we use extremely dense or extremely light substances.
For substances with a density of 1 g/cm3 - like water, for instance - the volume in mL is equivalent to the mass (in g), as one cm3 is equivalent to one mL.
Otherwise, one needs to know the density of what is wanting to be converted.
For instance, if one has a material x with a density of 1.5 g/cm3, and he has 3 mL of it and is trying to ascertain the mass in g, he would use the following equation:
y mL x 1.5 g/mL = z g.
Plugging it in:
3 mL x 1.5 g/mL = 4.5 g
The conversion of milliliters to grams will have an outcome of the same number. For example, 196 ml will also equal 198 grams.
57.4
how do you convert grams to cups
How do you convert 300 grams into cups
16250 grams.
Divide by 1000 to convert grams to kilograms. Then multiply by 2.2046 to convert kg to pounds.
Yes, Google 'convert grams to pounds' and pick a conversion tool.
To convert grams into atoms, you have to convert them into moles first. Get the molar mass and multiply it by the number of moles to get the atoms.
1000 milligrams is equal to 1 gram, therefore 2.8 grams is equal to 2800 milligrams. To convert from grams to milligrams multiply by 1000, and to convert milligrams to grams divide by 1000.
420 grams
There are 000.68 grams in a kg
3680 grams
100,000 grams
26,600 grams