None, since there can be no conversion. A milligram is a measure of mass. A centimetre is a measure of length. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
The formula for converting millimoles to mg cm cubed is: (mg / cm^3) X (1g / 1000 mg) X (mol / g) X (1000 cm^3 / 1 dm^3). This can be used for unit concentrations.
It is mg.
It is mg.
The density of oil can vary depending on the type, but typically ranges from 800 to 1000 mg/cm^3.
A milligram (mg) is a unit of mass. A centimetre (cm) is a unit of distance. The two units are therefore incompatible. However, if you mean 100 mm, that would be 10 cm.
Centimeters (cm) and milligrams (mg) measure different quantities: length and mass, respectively. Therefore, they cannot be directly compared in terms of size. For context, 1 cm is equal to 10 millimeters, while 1 mg is one-thousandth of a gram. Each unit serves a distinct purpose in measurements.
one mg is in one mg
CENTIMETRES
2.5 cm x 3.5 cm x 1.5 cm = 13.125 cm^3 13.125 cm^3 x 1.74g/cm^3 = 22.8375 grams Mg
3500 mg
1?
Okay, so, seriously, what is wrong with you people? Why are there so many questions about how many feet in a bucket or whatever? They're incompatible units. You can't convert one into the other. The reason you can't find the answer to this question anywhere it's because it's unanswerable. The only way to convert mg into cm would be to specify a conversion factor, like say "how many mg of copper in 1 cm of 14 gauge copper wire"? That's an answerable question (I don't know the answer, but it's fundamentally capable of being answered).