There is no equivalence.
A gram is a measure of mass. A milliitre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
If you are not convinced, consider a millilitre of air. How many grams? Next consider a millilitre of Mercury. How many grams?
The masses of equal volumes of the two substances will clearly be very different. So there is no direct conversion between mass and volume: you need to know the density of the substance to enable you to carry out the conversion.
There is no equivalence.
A gram is a measure of mass. A milliitre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
If you are not convinced, consider a millilitre of air. How many grams? Next consider a millilitre of mercury. How many grams?
The masses of equal volumes of the two substances will clearly be very different. So there is no direct conversion between mass and volume: you need to know the density of the substance to enable you to carry out the conversion.
There is no equivalence.
A gram is a measure of mass. A milliitre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
If you are not convinced, consider a millilitre of air. How many grams? Next consider a millilitre of mercury. How many grams?
The masses of equal volumes of the two substances will clearly be very different. So there is no direct conversion between mass and volume: you need to know the density of the substance to enable you to carry out the conversion.
There is no equivalence.
A gram is a measure of mass. A milliitre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
If you are not convinced, consider a millilitre of air. How many grams? Next consider a millilitre of mercury. How many grams?
The masses of equal volumes of the two substances will clearly be very different. So there is no direct conversion between mass and volume: you need to know the density of the substance to enable you to carry out the conversion.
There is no equivalence.
A gram is a measure of mass. A milliitre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
If you are not convinced, consider a millilitre of air. How many grams? Next consider a millilitre of mercury. How many grams?
The masses of equal volumes of the two substances will clearly be very different. So there is no direct conversion between mass and volume: you need to know the density of the substance to enable you to carry out the conversion.
That is approximately 0.31 of a tablespoon.
One cup is 250 grams. So 45 gm is about 1/6 of a cup
45mL of plain water has a mass of about 45 grams.
45 grams is 1.59 ounces.
37 ml of water is 37 grams.
143 ml of water is 143 grams
70 grams of water is 70 ml.
That cannot be determined, for grams is a unit of weight and mL is a unit of volume.
They are equal: 45 cm3 or cc = 45 mL
There are 60 mls in 60 grams. Since 1 ml of any substance=1 cc which is equal to 1 gram. So grams is equal to milliliters in conversion.
There's a thousand grams in a kilogram, 45 grams is 0.045 kilograms.
This cannot be sensibly answered. A milliliter (mL or ml) is a measure of volume, grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
5 ml