Depends on the rate of supply of heat and the relative humidity. It could take forever (100% relative humidity), or be almost instantaneous (pour onto a red hot plate with < 100% humidity).
This depends on many factors.
One fifth of a standard teaspoonful (in the UK).
A milliliter is one onethousandth of a liter, or could be writen as 1 milliliter=.001 liters
one milliliter = 0.0338140227 US fluid ounces Source: Google.com search on the question.
It depends on the temperature and humidity in the area surrounding the cup. The hotter it is, the quicker the water will evaporate. If it is cold then the water will evaporate slowly. Too cold and it will freeze. But even ice evaporates although slowly.
One milliliter is one cubic centimeter.
If you mean, when will the entire cup evaporate, you are supposed to divide 1 by 1/3.
It could take between one and four months for a cup of water to evaporate indoors at 65 degrees depending on the surface area and the humidity.
Millilitre is a unit of capacity, not length
Milliliter would be the best measurement. Liter is four cups which equals to 1000 Milliliters. And one cup is 250mL (Milliliters). It would take a long time just to fill up 1 cup worth of sweat and 4 times as long to get a Liter of sweat.
This depends on how much of sunlight or light is aimed at the Water. If it's aimed in one direction; all focused in one spot, it will turn into water vapor quickly.
One fifth of a standard teaspoonful (in the UK).
As long as it is not whipped cream, one milligram is more.
"ml" is the abbreviation for ''milliliter"one ml = 1 milliliter
a milliliter
One cubic centimetre of liquid, of some sort. so, a teaspoon is about 10 ml, or 10cc
1 milliliter is the same as about 1/4 teaspoon.
Put 2 cups outside on a sunny day. One with salt water and one with regular water. Check on them every 5 minutes or just watch them. Then you time how long the salt water took to evaporate compared against how long it took the regular water to evaporate. Then you'll have your answer.