You will need to expand on your questions 50g of what - lead, oil, Mercury, water????
You divide the mass by the density (in common units) to get the volume then convert to the required units.
i.e. for cold water density = 1000 kg/m^3
50g = 0.05kg
1m^3 = 1000 Litres = 1000000 ml.
so
0.05 / 1000 * 1000000 = 0.05 * 1000 = 50ml.
or another way to remember this is 1 litre of water = 1kg therefore 0.05kg water = 0.05Litres
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoWiki User
∙ 15y agoThat depends on the density of the substace involved. Milliliters (ml) are a measure of volume and grams (g) a measure of weight. In the case of water, which has a density of 1, 50 grams would occupy 50 ml.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoNone. Grams are a measure of weight; millilitres are a liquid measure.
Perhaps you want to know how many grams of a particular substance will fit in a 50ml measure? You'd need to say what substance you are measuring, because, for example, a 50ml measure of nuts would weigh more in grams than a 50ml measure of flour.
Wiki User
∙ 10y agoThis cannot be sensibly answered. Milliliters is a measure of volume and grams is a measure of weight or mass.
Wiki User
∙ 13y agoDepends on the substance but if water it would be 50 ml at 0 0C
Wiki User
∙ 9y ago50 grams of water is 50 ml
1.014 g/ml
694 mL of glucose solution 0,2 M are needed.
i think its about 43.45
50cc = 50ml
The normal level of albumin in blood serum is 35-50 g/L (or 3,5-5,0 g/100 mL).
That is approximately 50 ml
The density of water at room temperature is approximately 1 g/mL. So, for a 50 mL sample that weighs 98.5 g, the density can be calculated as mass/volume = 98.5 g / 50 mL = 1.97 g/mL.
Approx. 50 g.
mL is a measure of volumeg is a measure of massYou need to know the density of the substance you are asking about if you want to convert between volume and mass:Volume (mL) = mass (g) / density (g/mL)(To make a guess you might assume the density of Gr.Yog. to be 1.0 g/ml:then the answer is 50 mL)
Density is calculated by dividing the mass of a substance by its volume. In this case, the density of the cooking oil is 0.87 g/mL (43.5 g / 50 mL).
Given that the volume of water displaced by the body is 50 mL (from 150 mL to 200 mL), and since 1 mL of water is equivalent to 1 g, the mass of the body is equal to the volume of water displaced, which is 50 g. Therefore, the density of the body is 50 g / 60 g = 0.83 g/mL.
The density of the oil is calculated by dividing the mass of the oil (43.5 g) by the volume it occupies (50 mL). Density = Mass / Volume Density = 43.5 g / 50 mL Density = 0.87 g/mL.
Millilitres and micrograms are not directly comparable as the first is a unit of volume and the other is a unit of mass. For water, 1 ml = 1 g. 1 mg = 0.001 g so 50 mg = 0.05 g. Therefore, 50 mg = 0.05 ml.
The density of the carbon is calculated by dividing its mass by its volume. In this case, the density of the carbon is 50 g / 4.5 ml = 11.11 g/ml.
The density of the substance is calculated by dividing the mass (50 g) by the volume (75 mL). Density = mass/volume. Therefore, the density of the substance is 0.67 g/mL.
Does not convert; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
50 cc = 50 ml