This question can't be answered, because milligrams are a measure of weight, while liters are a measure of volume. The weight of one liter of something depends on that substance's density.
As an example, one liter of water weighs one million mg.
Not enough to improve your english.
1 Liter = 1000 ml1 ml = 0.001 LA milliliter (mL) is a measure of volume, as is a liter (L). One liter is equal to 1,000 mL - in other words, one mL is 1/1,000th of a liter.
1820 grams in a British gallon.
Not possible to answer - a litre is a measurement of volume, while a kilogram is a measurement of weight!
1 liter = 1 cubic dm
There is one milligram in one milligram.
Given that a liter of water does weight about a kilogram, there would be a million milligrams of water per liter, so yes, one milligram per liter does work out to be one part per million (ppm).
No. A mg (milligram) is a measure of weight; a liter is a measure of volume.
No. As far as I know, there is no such thing as a "cubic milligram" - it doesn't make much sense to take the cube of a mass.
A microgram is smaller than a milligram. A microgram measure one millionth of a gram. A milligram is one thousandth of a gram.
a milligram is one one-thousandth of a gram which measures mass and a milliter is one one-thousandth of a liter which measures volume so this question cannot be answered.
One milligram, if the water is at 4 degrees Centigrade. At any other temperature, the water will weigh a bit less.
This cannot be sensibly answered. A liter is a measure of volume, milligrams is a measure of weight or mass.
There are 1000 micro grams in a milligram.
Nanogram per liter (ng/L) and milligram per liter (mg/L) are both units of measurement used to express the concentration of a substance in a liquid. The main difference is in their scale: nanogram per liter is a smaller unit of measurement than milligram per liter. 1 milligram (mg) is equal to 1,000,000 nanograms (ng), so if a substance is measured in ng/L, it would be a much smaller concentration compared to if it were measured in mg/L.
Here, you have to divide 1 by 0.1. This tells you that there are 10 0.1 milligrams in a milligram.
If there are 50 ppm (parts per million) of a substance in 1 liter, this means there are 50 milligrams of the substance in 1 liter. Since 1 milligram is equal to 1 milliliter of water, there are 50 milliliters of the substance in 1 liter.