yes, as grams is far too heavy
One milligram is equivalent to one thousandth of a gram. An example of a milligram would be the weight of a typical small paperclip or a single grain of sand.
No.. you dont have grands of sand, if you mean grain.... Let's say for the present queston it is a medium-grained sand averaging about 0.2 mm (0.02 cm) in diameter. Assuming the grain is an approximate sphere, the volume is about 5 x 10^-6 cubic cm. The density is 2.65 g/cubic cm. 2.65 * 5*10^-6 = 13 * 10^-6 g, or 13 micrograms. do it yourself to make sure I didn't make any conversion or other errors. Lee.W
A grain of sand is a network solid (covalent network solid).
The grain size of fine sand typically ranges from 0.075 to 0.425 millimeters in diameter.
If the grain is rounded, none.
One milligram is equivalent to one thousandth of a gram. An example of a milligram would be the weight of a typical small paperclip or a single grain of sand.
A grain of sand, a small paperclip, or a typical mosquito would each weigh around a milligram.
Miligram
Milligrams
its called a sand dune.
Grain of sand is bigger
fossil content, measurement of slopes, and analyzing grain size distribution.
never sand wood across the grain always sand with the grain
never sand wood across the grain always sand with the grain
Depending on the size of the grain of sand, sand is best. It holds more moisture then dirt does.
No.. you dont have grands of sand, if you mean grain.... Let's say for the present queston it is a medium-grained sand averaging about 0.2 mm (0.02 cm) in diameter. Assuming the grain is an approximate sphere, the volume is about 5 x 10^-6 cubic cm. The density is 2.65 g/cubic cm. 2.65 * 5*10^-6 = 13 * 10^-6 g, or 13 micrograms. do it yourself to make sure I didn't make any conversion or other errors. Lee.W
Sand Grain Studios was created in 2002.