A milliliter is a unit that is used to measure liquid volume. The mass of one milliliter of a substance would vary greatly depending on the substance.
Yes, at 3.98 °C one milliliter (cubic centimeter) of water has a mass of 1.00 gram
1 milliliter or 1 cubic centimeter of pure water weighs 1 gram, or has the mass of 1 gram.
If the water is pure, and the temperature and pressure are both at standard values,then the mass of one milliliter of water is 1 gram.
One milliliter of pure, clean water at standard temperature and pressurehas a mass of 1 gram, or 0.001 kilogram.
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).
Milligrams versus millilitersOne milliliter of water weighs one gram. There are 1000 milligrams in one gram.One milliliter of other substances will weigh more or less, depending upon their densities. A millilter of gasoline, for example, weighs less, and a milliliter of mercury weighs more -- WAY more. (No pun intended.)Milligram is a unit of mass; milliliter is a unit of volume. You can't directly convert the two. If you know the density of a substance, you can say, for example, "1 milliliter of water has a mass of 1 gram (1000 milligrams)", or "1 milliliter of lead has a mass of about 11 gram".
1 milliliter or 1 cubic centimeter of pure water weighs 1 gram, or has the mass of 1 gram.
The SI or international system of measurement base unit of mass is not the milliliter. The SI base unit of mass is the kilogram.
The answer would be 1 kg. If one milliliter of water weighs one gram, one liter of water weighs 1000 grams, which equals one kilogram.
You have your units mixed up. One milliliter (ml) equals one cubic centimeter (cc.) One cc of water at 4°C has a mass of one gram (g.) Kilo is the multiplier that means x1000. Therefore 1000 ml (or cc) of water has a mass of 1000 g or 1 Kilogram (Kg.)
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.
I am sorry, you can not compare milliliters (volume) and kilograms (mass). Those units are not compatible.