1 gram
1 gram is the weight of 1 cubic centimeter of pure water. 1 gram is one thousandth = 0.001 of a kilogram.
1 gram of water is exactly one mililiter.
A gram is the mass of 1 mL of water. Imagine a cube, each side 1 cm in length. Fill up that cube with water. That much water weighs one gram. A rough estimate is that one gram is about the weight of a standard paper clip.
A cc or ml or milliliter is a volume. A gram is, by definition, a weight. A pint equals a pound the world around is what we learned in chemistry class and a cc = 1 gram of water, but one gram of gold would be WAY less than 1 cc.
The mass and volume of water was used to define the SI units for weight and volume, and is almost exactly 1 gram per milliliter (1 gram/cm3).Although this changes slightly with temperature, one gram of water is one cc or one mL of water.A liter of water at 25°C weighs about 0.997 kilograms.
Only in the metric system. The metric system bases its unit of weight, the gram, on the weight of one millilitre of water. Therefore one litre of water (or other liquid which is mostly water) weighs one kilogram (1000 grams)
One milliliter is equaled to one gramml are volume, grams are weight. it would be like asking how many miles in a pound?
The answer would be 1 kg. If one milliliter of water weighs one gram, one liter of water weighs 1000 grams, which equals one kilogram.
Neither. One gram of anything has the same weight.
gram molecular weight = weight of one mole of the substance in grams for example 1 mole of water weighs 1 + 1 + 16 = 18 grams so gram molecularweight of water is 18g
One mg is one milligram or one one thousandth of a gram (the base unit for weight in metric) if the unit is 1/1000th of the base unit then it would stand to reason that you would need 1000mg to equal 1 gram.
Yes and no. While the weight of the dollar bill would be decreased due to the lower gravity, grams are actually a measurement of mass, not weight. This means the weight would be different, but still technically one gram.