you cannot add ml to g, so u need ot convert one unit to another 1 ml of water= 1 g of water capacity= 600 ml of water= 600 g of water
bottle mass= 400, when filled withy water 400 + 600= 1000 g= 1 kg
25 ml is roughly 4.2% of 600 ml
one liter (or litre) is 1000 ml. 2 liters is 2000, so subtract 1650 from 2000. The result is your answer.
3000 ml of water has a mass of 3 kg.
The formula for density is density = mass/volume. In this case, the mass is 25 g and the volume is 25 ml. Therefore, the density of water in this scenario would be 1 g/ml.
You can't convert grams (mass) to milliliters (volume) unless you know the density of the material.
To calculate the mass of a 600 ml sample of seawater, you need to know the density. If the density of seawater is approximately 1.025 g/ml, the mass can be calculated using the formula: mass = density × volume. Therefore, the mass of the seawater would be approximately 600 ml × 1.025 g/ml = 615 grams.
The density of the liquid sample is 0.75 g/mL. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of the liquid sample by its volume: density = mass/volume. Given that the mass is 450 g and the volume is 600 mL, the density is 450 g / 600 mL = 0.75 g/mL.
Density = Mass/Volume = 600/30 = 20 grams per ml.
The mass of 10 mL of water is 10 g.
The mass of 1258 mL of water is 1258 g.
The mass of 82 mL of water is 82 g.
The mass of 1 mL of water is 1 g.
The mass of 100 ml of water is approximately 100 grams. Water has a density of 1 gram per milliliter, so for every 1 ml of water, the mass is 1 gram.
This question cannot be answered sensibly. A millilitre 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. It takes only a little mental effort to compare a ml of water and a ml of mercury to see that the two will have very different masses.
0.5
It depends on what liquid we are talking about, 600 ml is a measure of volume equivalent to 600 cm3. If it was water, then it would be 600 ml x 0,988 ml-1kg = 592,8 ~600 g. But other liquids or gases may weigh more or less, as it is only water that has the unique ability to weigh in at ~ 1 g/ml. (Actually, volume was known and stated before mass, and thus, the mass was stated by using water as a reference; they took 1 dm3 water and weighed it, thus concluding that 1 kg was the same as how much 1 dm3 (1 litre) of water weighed. So it is not water that has a unique ability, it just happened to be chosen amongst all other elemnts as the indicator for mass - perhaps it was chosen because it is so common on our planet and always has been vital to our lives?).
The volume of water is 118 mL, since the mass and volume of water are equivalent at room temperature.