Material density should be given to convert from a mass measure (grams) to a volume measure (cc)
This is not a proper conversion. Cubic centimeters (cc) is a measure of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
A gram (or milligram) is a unit of weight, while a cubic centimeter is a unit of volume. We would need the density of the substance to calculate what you are asking. If you are dealing with water, then one cc equals one gram, but almost nothing else works out that well.
Not really but is sort of could be. A milligram is a unit of weight and is 1 thousandth of a gram, and a cc or cubic centimetre is a unit of volume and is 1 thousandth of a litre. For water 1 litre weighs 1 Kilo gram, so the the weight of 1 cc is 1 gram. But for other liquids the weight will be slightly different.
.25 grams... a gram is a thousand milligrams.
This question cannot be answered sensibly. A cubic centimetre (cc) is a measure of volume, with dimensions [L3]. A gram is a measure of mass, with dimensions [M]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information. A simple mental exercise will demonstrate that a cc of air and a cc of water will have very different masses.
A 12 fl oz. coke can has 355 cc.
Approximately 1 cc of sugar is 1 gram.
depends on the type of fluid water for eg; if there is 1 gm , then vol. occupied is 1 cc as "density" of water is 1gm/cc
Water: Exactly 1 gram per cc. Any other substance: Could be anything.
A cc or ml or milliliter is a volume. A gram is, by definition, a weight. A pint equals a pound the world around is what we learned in chemistry class and a cc = 1 gram of water, but one gram of gold would be WAY less than 1 cc.
Roughly 25 cc gives 1 HP.
cc = ml if you assume that density is 1 g / ml, you assume a gram is a millilitre then 300 mg / ml = 300,000 mg per kilogram
I milligram = one-thousandth of a gram...
CC is the roman numeral for 1,000, typically its measured in milligrams (millionth of a gram) so it'd be 5,000mg
25. The 'cc' and the 'ml' are identical volumes.
Gram per CC (cubic centimeter)
there are 25 grams to an ounce
1 cubic centimeter or 1 milliliter of pure water weighs 1 gram. Forget syrup or oil. That weighs more.