As long as it is not whipped cream, one milligram is more.
Assuming fresh water at atmospheric pressure and room temperature, then its density is assumed 1 gram/cc or 1 gm/milliliter Then, 6.75 milligram = 0.00675 gram = 0.00675 milliliter
One milliliter of pure water.
Divide by 1000.
No, a gram has a volume of 1ml.
A milligram (mg) is a measure of weight equal to 0.001 grams or 0.0000022046 ounces.
Good luck. There is no such operation. "Milliliter" is a volume ... a little piece of space. "Milligram" is a tiny amount of mass. Before you can tell how much mass there is inside a piece of space, you have to know what substance you're talking about: -- If the substance is air, it's a small amount. -- If the substance is water, there's roughly 1 milligram of mass in each milliliter of space. -- If the substance is lead or gold, there's a lot more mass in every milliliter. -- And if the milliliter is empty, then there are no milligrams of mass in it at all.
They measure different things: 1 milliliter is a measure of volume, whereas 1 milligram is a measure of weight.
A milligram is a measure of mass just like a kilogram, while a gallon is a measure of volume. You cannot directly equate mass to volume. Under some idealized conditions a milligram of water is one milliliter. A milliliter is a unit of volume. There are 204,412 milliliters in 54 U.S. gallons
Milligram is a weight and cannot be compared to a liquid volume.
No, mg is a measure of weight/mass, while ml is a measure of volume.
a milligram is one one-thousandth of a gram which measures mass and a milliter is one one-thousandth of a liter which measures volume so this question cannot be answered.