If the water and all the conditions surrounding it are standard,
then there are 1 billion of them.
No. Micromolar is a measure of micromoles per liter, not micrograms per liter. To convert between micrograms and micromoles, use the molar mass of the substance.
129 (grams per liter) = 129,000,000 micrograms per liter.
gram is weight, litre is volume if water, 1.5 micrograms = 0.0000015 millilitres
grams are weight, litres are volume if it's water then 1,000,000 micrograms = 1 millilitre
Typical concentrations of mercury in water bodies range from below 0.001 to 0.003 micrograms per liter (mg/l);
0.461 milligrams per litre
Don't drink (you and any animal) contaminated water (more than approx. 15 micrograms/liter uranium).
There are 1,000,000 micrograms in a gram. This is indiscriminant of what the material is. i.e. it could be gold, lead, water etc.
There are 10 deciliters of water in a liter of water.
Ppm is part per million, a microgram is one millionth of a gram, a litre of water approximates to 1000g. 1300 micrograms is 1.3 milligrams. One milligram is one thousandth of a gram, as one litre is one thousand grams, 1mg/L is 1ppm ( 1 000 X 1 000 = 1 000 000), so 1.3mg/L is 1.3ppm.
if 222 micrograms of fresh water of density 1 gm/cc, then 222 micrograms equals 222 micro-liters that equals 0.222 milliliters. Result: 0.222 milliliters
120,000 micrograms