a femtoliter i believe
Milliliters (ml) and centiliters (cl) are both units of volume measurement in the metric system. The main difference is in their scale - 1 milliliter is equal to 0.1 centiliters. This means that there are 10 milliliters in 1 centiliter.
Three US fluid ounces is about 88.721 mL.Algebraic Steps / Dimensional Analysis Formula 3 fl.oz.*1 l33.814 fl.oz.*1000 ml1 l=88.72058869 mlDirect Conversion Formula 3 fl.oz.*29.57352956 ml1 fl.oz.=88.72058869 ml
This scenario suggests that the matter has a density of 1 g/mL. Given that equal masses occupy different volumes, it implies a difference in densities between the two containers. A density greater than 1 g/mL would fill the smaller container, while a density less than 1 g/mL would fill the larger container.
The number not the same as 1400 mL can be any number other than 1400.
First, cl stands for centiliters and ml stands for milliliters. There are 100 centiliters in a liter and 1000 milliliters in a liter. Basically, this means that 2 cl is 0.02 liters and 35 ml is 0.035 liters. So, there really is only 0.015 difference between the two. Hope this helped.
A mL (milliliter) is about 30 times smaller than one fluid ounce.
No, 4 tea spoon is smaller than 1fl oz because 1 fl oz =29.57 ml and 4 teaspoon=20 ml
They are incompatible and cannot be compared as they measure different things: an ounce (oz) is a measure of mass; whereas a millilitre (ml) is a measure of volume However a fluid ounce (fl oz) IS a measure of volume and is about 30 ml making the fluid ounce (fl oz) bigger than the millilitre (ml).
mg is smaller than mL
1 mL = 0.03381 fl oz So, an ounce is MUCH MORE.
A milliliter (mL) is 100 times smaller than a deciliter (mL).
Yes, 0.3 mL is smaller than 0.7 mL in a blood glucose meter. The difference between them is 0.4 mL.
No, ml is much smaller.
acup
A centiliter (cl) is smaller than a milliliter (ml). Specifically, 1 cl is equal to 10 ml. Therefore, 1 ml is larger than 1 cl.
Yes, 500 mL is smaller than 50 L. To put it in perspective, 50 liters is equivalent to 50,000 mL, making 500 mL just a small fraction of that amount. Therefore, 500 mL is significantly smaller than 50 L.
1 L = 1,000 ml 500 ml = 1/2 L . . . That's smaller than a whole L .