1 millimeter = 1,000 micrometers
2 millimeters = 2,000 micrometers
3 millimeters = 3,000 micrometers
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'N' millimeters = (N x 1,000) micrometers
7.5 millimeters = (7.5 x 1,000) micrometers
Do you see it yet ?
I'll re-write the same thing this way:
7.5 millimeters = 1,000 times (7.5 micrometers)
It takes 1,000 millimeters, end to end, to make one meter.
if its a line it goes on forever so it has arrows on each end. For a segment you just make a dot, measure 46 millimeters and put another dot on that end. No arrows on a segment.
Approximately 30 millimeters away from primary end of that tape.
There is no end to the number pi...it goes on indefinately. However, pi to the 2oth place is 3.14159265358979323846.
place on end of what you're measuring at 0, and note where the other end is. example, when measuring a pencil, place one end at 0, and the other end should be at around 10cm
Not even close.A typical hydra is a few millimeters long.Copepods are much more common, and a typical copepod is less than 2 millimeters long.Organisms in the Archaea and Bacteria groups are typically a few micrometers in size.(So a thousand typical bacteria set end-to-end are about the same length as a typical hydra).
One centimeter can be cut up into 10 millimeters. It takes 10 millimeters, placed end-to-end, to reach one centimeter.
micrometers are 1 millionth of a meter and millimeters are 1 thousandth of a meter, so 2 million divided by 2000 is 1000. the answer is 1000
It takes 1,000 millimeters, end to end, to make one meter.
In a standard 30cm ruler there are 300mm (discluding the bits at the end of the rulers which are unmarked).
No. Why should you?
It takes 10 millimeters end-to-end to cover one centimeter.
Plankton can be microscopic or larger organisms such as jellyfish. The largest Lion's mane jellyfish had 120-foot long tentacles. There exists a spectrum for naming them by size, megaplankton that are over 20 millimeters and femtoplankton at the other end that are less than .2 micrometers.
1micrometer=10-6 m 60 micrometer = 1 bacterial cell so, 10 6 micrometer = 60*106 bacterial cells
if its a line it goes on forever so it has arrows on each end. For a segment you just make a dot, measure 46 millimeters and put another dot on that end. No arrows on a segment.
1mm=1000 µmtherefore can fit 1000 cellsThis answer was actually correct... But needs more information.Average Human RBC (erythrocyte) diameter of 6–8µmSo, 7.5µm would be within the statistical average.And 7.5mm = 7500µm.So 7500µm / 7.5µm/cell = 1000 cells.
Approximately 30 millimeters away from primary end of that tape.