mcg stands for micro gram (1/10,000th of a gram)...an accurate scale designed for
small weights would do the trick.
A mcg is a measure of mass, not of area.
1 mg is around 1000 mcg. Then, 50 mcg is 0.05 mg.
Yes, both ug (microgram) and mcg (microgram) are equivalent units of measure representing one millionth of a gram.
mcg (micrograms) measure weight, and tblsp (tablespoons) measure volume. The question can't be answered without knowing the density of the material being measured.
You cannot. A percentage is a pure number whereas mcg is a measure of mass. If I said I spent 10% of my time on Answers.com, how on earth would you convert that to a measure involving mass?
A cc (cubic centimeter) is a measure of volume. A mcg (microgram) is a measure of mass (or, loosely speaking, weight). The two cannot be compared. It is like asking "how many gallons are in a pound?"
This cannot be sensibly answered. Milliliters (mL) is a measure of volume, mcg is a measure of weight or mass.
This cannot be sensibly answered. Milliliters (mL or ml) is a measure of volume, mcg is a measure of weight or mass.
There is no equivalence. A microgram (mcg) is a measure of mass. Its only dimension is that of mass, not length or width. Any attempt at conversion from one to the other is not valid.
The question makes no sense whatsoever. A cubic centimetre (cc) is a measure of volume in 3-dimensional space while a microgram (mcg) is a measure of mass. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is fundamentally flawed.
Milliliters are a measure of volume. Micrograms are a measure of mass (weight). Without knowing the atomic weight of the substance it is not possible to calculate the answer for you.
The difference is 1997.6 mcg.