No, grams and kilograms are units of mass/weight.
Cubic meters are a unit of volume.
These are all easy to find in your book: Length . . . . . . . Meter Mass . . . . . . . . . Kilogram Volume . . . . . . . Cubic Meter (* Liter is 1/1000th m3, or one dm3) Density . . . . . . . Kilogram per cubic meter Time .. . . . . . . . . Second Temperature . . . Kelvin or Celsius degree (same size)
Length. . . . . . . . . meter Mass . . . . . . . . . . kilogram Volume . . . . . . . . cubic meter Density . . . . . . . . gram/cm^3 Time . . . . . . . . . . second Temperature . . . Kelvin
1 gram = 0.001 kilogram 1 centimetre =0.01 metre so that 1 cm3 = 0.000001 m3 Therefore, 1 gram per cm3 = 0.001 kg per 0.000001 m3 = 1000 kg/m3. So to convert from gram per cubic centimetre to kilogram per cubic metre, multiply by 1000.
Length: MeterMass: KilogramWeight: Newton
A gram is a unit of mass. A cubic metre is a unit of volume. The two units are therefore incompatible.
Modern hydrometers usually measure specific gravity which is usually expressed by a unit of mass per a unit of volume, like kilogram per cubic meter or gram per milliliter.
The terms liter, meter, and gram are not numerical values, but units of metric measure. In SI units they are the meter (m) for distance, liter (L) for volume) and kilogram (kg) for mass. Gram is not an SI unit but a derivation and subunit of kg. 1 gram equals .001 kg.
The basic unit is grams.So:kilogramshectogramsdecagramsgramsdecigramscentigramsmilligramsCommentThe 'base', not 'basic', unit for mass in the SI system is the kilogram, not the gram. Further, the prefixes 'hecto', 'deca', and 'deci' are not used in SI.
SI unit for mass is kilograms. Other units are g, mg etc.
Kg/m3 g/cm3
The MKS (meter-kilogram-second) unit of momentum is kilogram meter per second (kg m/s), while the CGS (centimeter-gram-second) unit of momentum is gram centimeter per second (g cm/s).
Mass = [ gram ]Volume = [ cm3 ]Density = [ gram per cm3 ]