1 millilitre (equivalently 1 centimeter cubed) of water is equal to 1 gram. The relationship above only holds true for water at 4 deg Celsius. The density of water changes with temperature so at any other temperature 1 ml of water not be equal to 1 gram(although it will be close).
To determine how much agar is needed for 300 ml of medium, we can use a proportion based on the agar quantity provided for 1 liter. 6.4 g agar is used in 1 liter, which means for 300 ml, we can calculate: (6.4 g / 1000 ml) * 300 ml = 1.92 g of agar. Therefore, 1.92 g of agar is needed for 300 ml of the medium.
One milliliter (ml) is equal to 1,000 microliters (ul). So in this case, 250 microliters would equal .25 milliliters, and would be smaller.
A general rule of thumb is that a healthy individual with normal exercise and perspiration should drink a minimum of 1 cc (ml) of water per calorie of food consumed. For example, if on a 1000 calorie daily diet, at least 1000 ccs of water should be consumed per day (1 liter).156 litresAt least 8 cups a day.
The human body is 61.8% water by weight, 16.6% protein, 14.9% fat and 3.3% nitrogen. There are also other small elements which are much smaller percentages which make up our weight also.
When an egg cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, water will move out of the cell, causing it to shrink and decrease in weight. In a hypotonic solution, water will move into the cell, causing it to swell and increase in weight. In an isotonic solution, there will be no net movement of water, so the weight of the egg cell will remain constant.
There are 5 ml of water in 1 teaspoon.
1 liter of water weighs 1 kg so 1 ml of water weighs 1 mg so 5 ml of water weighs 5 mg
The weight of the object is equaled to the level of the displaced water minus the original water level before the object was placed in it.| I.e. Original water level was: 150 ml. When we placed a rock inside the water, it displaced the water and the water level now sits at 200ml. 200 ml - 150 ml = 50 ml. So the object weighs about 50 mL or 50g since 1 mL of water is 1g.
1 ml of water weighs 1 gram
No set answer to that.Gram is an unit of weight while ml is an unit of volume - the result will depend on the density of the substance. 1 ml of lead will be a lot heavier than than 1 ml of sugar.1 ml of water weighs 1 gram. for other materials the weight is different.
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).
By assuming density of water 1 g/ml the total weight of 4 times 160 ml is 22.5757 oz.
Only if it is water, which has a mass of 1gram per ml volume
One teaspoon of water is about 4.9293 ml. or 4.93 ml. 4.93 grams is the weight of 1 teaspoon of water.
The weight of 30 ml of a substance depends on its density. If the substance is water, which has a density of approximately 1 gram per milliliter, then 30 ml would weigh 30 grams. However, for substances with different densities, the weight of 30 ml would vary.
1 ml = 1g of water so 25ml would weight 25 grams
To convert milliliters (mL) to milligrams (mg) for water, it would be a 1:1 conversion where 1 mL of water is approximately equal to 1 mg. Therefore, the mass of 538 mL of water would be approximately 538 mg.