One milliliter of water has a volume of one milliliter and a mass of one gram.
Its weight on earth is close to 0.0098 newton (0.0353 ounce weight, rounded).
1 ml of water masses 1g
1 gram
No, mL are a unit of volume and grams are a unit of mass. 1 mL of water has a mass of 1 g
Since each ml of water weights 1 g, 0.1 liters of water = 100 grams. So 1 kilogram (kg) is equal to 1000 grams. This means 100 g = 0.1 kg.
(volume) x (density) = mass (250 ml) x (1 g/ml) = 250 grams 1 ml = 1 cc
Water has a density of about 1 (or 1000, depending on the units used...) meaning that every ml of water has a mass very close to 1 gram.
1 liter = 1,000 ml 1,000 grams = 1 kilogram If one ml of water has 1 gram of mass, then 1 liter has 1 kilogram of mass. On Earth only, that kilogram of mass weighs 9.8 newtons (2.205 pounds). (rounded)
One mililiter of water is approximately one gram.
Somehow your data doesn't add up. The mass difference would be 195 - 125 = 70 grams. 1 ml of water weighs roughly 1 gram, so you would expect 70 ml of water to be filled into the beaker. Your water is either contaminated, extremely heavy or its a trick question.
Pure water, standard temperature and pressure, etc. Mass of 100 ml of water = 100 grams
1 ml = 1g of water so 25ml would weight 25 grams
1 gm/ml
The mass of 1 mL of water is 1 g.
The mass of 1 mL of water is 1 g.