Weigh samples of the two that have the same volume. A solid object with greater "average density" will sink in a less-dense fluid. A lighter fluid will float atop a heavier one if they do not form a solution. Examples: - One cc of metallic iron will weigh more than one cc of motor oil (sinks) but less than one cc of mercury (floats in the mercury). - One cc of mercury weighs more than one cc of water (sinks) but one cc of oil weighs less than the water (floats).
1 cc = 1 ml They are the same measurement, 1/1000th of a liter
1.21g
Each cubic centimeter is equal to one ml. 30 cc equals 30 ml.
In this scenario, there would be a 50% chance of Cc and 50% chance of cc. Half of the offspring would have a cleft chin, and half would have a normal chin.?æ
Weigh it in grams, then, as the density of table salt is about 2.17 g/cc, divide the weight by 2.17 and the answer will be the volume of salt in cc.
There are 30 cc's per ounce, so 400 cc's would weigh 13.33 ounces.
420 lbs.
To convert cc to gram, one must multiple the specific gravity of the substance by the number of ccs to convert to a weight in grams.
A little over 18 ounces. 30 cc=1 ounce
15cc*1g/cc*(9.8m/s) = 147g = .324Lb
1005lbs
assuming water with density 1 gm/cc 550 cc = 550 gm
It very much depends on the substance. Cubic centimetres is a volume not a mass. 5,000 cc of vacuum would weigh nothing at all, 5,000 cc of water would weigh about 5 kilograms, 5,000 cc of mercury a great deal more
That depends on the liquid. 60 cc's of water = 60 ml = 60 grams = 2 ounces.
50 grams plus the wayt of the salt you added
It depends on the density of what you're weighing. The weight of 750 cc of water is 750 grams. The weight of 750 cc of milk is 810 grams.