1000ooo milliltres
A gram is 1/1000 of a litre, so if water, it is equal to a millilitre.
One litre is equal to one Kilogram of H2O. Therefore, in consideration to solutes in water, a milligram per litre is equal to a milligram per kilogram. 1 kilogram = 1000 grams. 1 gram = 1000 milligrams. Therefore 1 kilogram = 1000x1000 = 1 000 000 milligrams. Back to the first statement, substituting 1 000 000 milligrams for kilogram: a milligram per litre is equal to a milligram per 1 000 000 milligrams, which is one part per million. Cheers, Anthony F.
kilograms are units of weight. There is no such thing as a cubic kilogram.
Given that a liter of water does weight about a kilogram, there would be a million milligrams of water per liter, so yes, one milligram per liter does work out to be one part per million (ppm).
Exactly 1 kilogram
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
It depends on the units in which the measures are expressed: inches, feet etc.
A millimetre is a unit of length. A kilogram is a unit of mass. The two units are therefore incompatible.
Everything is in tens or units of ten and revolves around a kilogram of water and a litre being the same.
mg= Milligram
A water droplet is around one twentieth of a milligram. Add twenty drops together and you have something near one milligram of water. This is only an approximation and fluids other than water tend to be lighter than water so the approximation only works for water.
0.99997200078397804861463879011388 liters.I think the question is incomplete. You can not possibly mean how many litres are there in 1 kilogram. The two units describe two different quantities. Kilogram is a unit of mass while Litre is a unit of volume.