I have never heard of that symbol for a length unit. I assume you mean grams? With millimetres, first off we have to convert this to a volume unit. To do this we need all fimensions and the shape. When we find this, we need to know the density so that we can get the weight.
A millimetre is a unit of distance. A decilitre is a unit of capacity. The two units are therefore incompatible.
The decimetre is larger than the millimetre. Decimetre is 1/10 of a metre while millimetre is 1/1000 of a metre
5 g = 5000 mg5 g = 5000 mg5 g = 5000 mg5 g = 5000 mg5 g = 5000 mg5 g = 5000 mg
about millimetre - 1metre depending on the frequency
A millimetre is a unit of length. A litre is a unit of capacity. The two units are therefore incompatible.
A millimetre is a unit of length. A gram is a unit of mass. The two units are therefore incompatible.
Millimetres and millimetres are the same unit. Therefore, one millimetre is equal to one millimetre.
1 millimetre is equal to exactly 1 millimetre.
One millimetre (mm) equals 1 millimetre. No more, no less.
1 litre is 1000000 cubic millimetre.
A millimetre. A millimetre. A millimetre. A millimetre.
There are 16 16ths of a millimetre in a millimetre. so there are 20 x 16 16ths of a millimetre in 20 millimetres. 20 x 16 = 320.
1 millimetre = 1,000,000 nanometres. To convert a value in millimetres to nanometres, multiply by 1,000,000
There are 914.4 millimetres in one yard. Therefore, one millimetre is equal to 1/914.4 yards.
1 millimetre = 1000 micrometre so 1.6 millimetre = 1600 micrometres.
200 micrometres
0.001 meters.