20 years (APEX)
It can be sensibly answered if you base it on the ingredient. In this case, butter. 100g of butter will come out to 105.75 ml, or 7.05 tablespoons.
No, when 100g of iron reacts with oxygen to form iron oxide, the resulting compound will have a different mass than the initial iron due to the addition of oxygen atoms. The mass of the iron oxide formed will be greater than 100g, as the oxygen atoms combine with the iron atoms to form the compound.
Ethanol produces around 80% by fermenting 100g of sugar produce.
half kg = 500g → 100g = 100/500 half kg = 1/5 half kg.
density = mass/volume = 100g/50mL = 2g/mL
The half-life of the radioisotope is 9 years. This is calculated by determining the time it took for half of the original sample to decay. Since the sample went from 100g to 25g in 18 years, it lost 75g in that time period. After the first half-life, the sample would have 50g remaining, and after the second half-life, it would have 25g remaining.
Mass of C= 80.0 g Mass of H =20.0 g
100g of plaster of Paris will weigh 100g.
100g of honey weighs 100g. Honey is measured by weight, so 100g of honey will always weigh 100g.
To find the original mass of the cesium-137 sample, you can use the exponential decay formula: final amount = initial amount * (1/2)^(time/half-life). With the information provided, you would have: 12.5 = initial amount * (1/2)^(90.69/30.1). Solving for the initial amount gives you approximately 40 grams.
100g is larger than 100mg. 100g is equal to 100,000mg.
100g to a ml is 454609.00062ml.
it is cost 430$ for 100g
To calculate the number of moles of carbon in a 100g sample, you need to know the molar mass of carbon. The molar mass of carbon is 12 g/mol. Therefore, in a 100g sample, there would be 100g / 12 g/mol = 8.33 moles of carbon.
gold
63,5kcal/100g tofu
100g x 10 = 1kg Answer: 71kg