Yes, on volume basis
The volume of 19,3 milliters of water (or anything else) is greater than the volume of 1 milliliter of gold (or anything else)
Grams measure mass and milliliters measure volume, so it depends on what substance is in the milliliters. -- 960 milliliters of air at sea level contain about 1.2 grams. -- 960 milliliters of water contain about 960 grams. -- 960 milliliters of gold contain about 18,340 grams. -- 960 milliliters of empty space contain zero grams of anything.
No gold is more dense than water so it sinks and in the gold rush in Cali they paned underwater
The metal with the lower density occupies more volume, so it would displace more water. Density of silver = 10.49 g/cm-3 , density of gold = 19.3 g/cm-3, Silver's displacement is greater.
Gold will not change the color of water.
Its volume expands when water turns to ice, so one gram of ice has a volume slightly larger than one millimeter of water. The specific gravity of ice at freezing is 0.9168, which means that frozen water has a volume about 9 percent higher than when it was a liquid.
5 ml is 5 ml either way.
Grams measure mass and milliliters measure volume, so it depends on what substance is in the milliliters. -- 960 milliliters of air at sea level contain about 1.2 grams. -- 960 milliliters of water contain about 960 grams. -- 960 milliliters of gold contain about 18,340 grams. -- 960 milliliters of empty space contain zero grams of anything.
A milligram is a unit of weight, it is one-thousandth of one gram. Milliliters are units of volume. each milliliter is one-thousandth of one liter (or 1 cubic centimeter). In the case of pure water, one liter weighs one kilogram. Since each kilogram is 1000 grams, it means that each kilogram is one million milligrams. so 500 milligrams would be equal to half a gram. A gram of pure water then would have a volume of 1 milliliter, so half a gram (500 milligrams) would have a volume of half a milliliter. Please note that this relation between milligrams and milliliters holds for pure water only, because the density of water is 1 gram per cubic centimeter (a cubic centimeter is by definition equal to 1 milliliter). In the case of gold, which roughly has a density of 19 grams per cubic centimeter, half a gram (or 500 milligrams) of gold would then have a volume of 0.5 milliliter divided by 19, or .0263 milliliters.
5 gms Grams and milliliters measure different things. A gram is a unit of weight and a milliliter is a unit of volume. To convert one to the other you need to know what substance you are measuring. If you are measuring water then one milliliter weighs approximately one gram. If you are measuring mercury then one milliliter weighs approximately 13.59 grams.
100 grams of water
If you think only of pure water you can say:1 milliliter of pure water weighs 1 gram.Forget syrup or oil.For that calculations you need the specific weight (density) of the material.
Milliliters are a measure of volume. Grams are a measure of mass .To go from milliliters to grams and vice versa, you must know the density of the material -- otherwise there is no way to go from units of volume to units of mass. Some useful facts about milliliters:1 mL = 1 cm31000 milliliter = 1 literSo useful facts about grams:1 g = 1000 kilogramsA milliliter is a measure of volume and a gram is a measure of weight. The relationship could be that the density of water is one gram per milliliter.
10000000 mg in a kg
34.5/19.3=1.79mL (19.3 is the density of gold)
6.0*10^12 gram
No
Good luck. There is no such operation. "Milliliter" is a volume ... a little piece of space. "Milligram" is a tiny amount of mass. Before you can tell how much mass there is inside a piece of space, you have to know what substance you're talking about: -- If the substance is air, it's a small amount. -- If the substance is water, there's roughly 1 milligram of mass in each milliliter of space. -- If the substance is lead or gold, there's a lot more mass in every milliliter. -- And if the milliliter is empty, then there are no milligrams of mass in it at all.