No, mL are a unit of volume and grams are a unit of mass. 1 mL of water has a mass of 1 g
That depends how fast you want to do this. Please note that "watt" is not a unit of energy, it's a unit of power (energy per time unit).
Unit of dm water conductivity is microsiemens/cm
A unit = 1 = 1/1 in fraction form.
cubic feet
The basic unit of volume in the metric system measures a single liter of water is equal to 1 unit.
1 cc water weighs 1 gm, any other unit volume will be a multiple or fraction of that.
No, mL are a unit of volume and grams are a unit of mass. 1 mL of water has a mass of 1 g
MOl2 let-1
It depends on your water companies measure of 1 unit. In my area 1 unit is equal to 748 gallons of water. so 40 units would be: 40units X 748 gallons = 29,920 gallons of water. Just about the amount of water you would use to fill up an average swimming pool.
Newtons is a unit of weight or force. The mass unit would be kilograms. 1 liter of water has a mass of 1 kilogram. On Earth, this would have a weight of 9.8 Newtons.
NTU is the unit for measyrement of Cloudiness of water Amit Singh A-1 Lab
There is no specific unit for "water pressure". The unit for pressure in general is the pascal; 1 pascal = 1 newton / square meter. In practice, the "bar" is often used, but that's not, strictly speaking, an SI unit. 1 bar = 100,000 pascal, and it is approximately equal to 1 atmosphere.
The metric unit for heat is the calorie - the heat required to raise 1 gram of water by 1 deg C. In the SI unit system it would be the kilocalorie - the heat to raise 1 kg by 1 degC
Water heaters can range from 1 unit to 10 units.
Gram is a unit of mass, millilitre is a unit of volume; only for water 1 mL has a mass of 1 g.
If you think to litre the conversion is impossible.Litre is a unit for volume and kilogram a unit for mass.Only for water the mass of 1 L is 1 kg.