A "litre" can weigh different amounts depending on what the litre is comprised of. For example, a litre of water will weigh more than a litre of chocolate mousse (more air in the mousse, but I admit the example's odd)... If you then dissolve a lot of sugar in the litre of water, it will weigh more than it did previously (the volume will also increase a little, some will have to be poured out to retain "1 litre", but it will not weigh what it did originally). So it is not possible to know how much of a litre weighs a gram without knowing what substance the litre is comprised of.
If 1 litre is equal to 910 grams, than 1 kilogram will equal to how much litre?
A millilitre equals 1 gram of water.
The average density of blood is about 1,060 grams per liter. So there would be about 1.06 milliliters of blood in in one gram.
1000 gram equals to 1 kg
there are 1000grams in a litre
Organic loading rate equals gram COD/ liter /day
The terms liter, meter, and gram are not numerical values, but units of metric measure. In SI units they are the meter (m) for distance, liter (L) for volume) and kilogram (kg) for mass. Gram is not an SI unit but a derivation and subunit of kg. 1 gram equals .001 kg.
10 microgram = 0.0000100 gram (1 microgram = 0.0000010 gram)
One liter equals 1.06 quarts.
1 pound equals 453.59 grams.
0.00010 gram equals 0.10 miligram
It equals 1 gram.