It is some bizarre measure with units [L]-4[T]2
We're not sure what your "mg" and "sm" represent,but we're pretty sure the answer is "no".1 newton = 1 kilogram-meter / second2 .
1000 mg per gram, hence the prefix "mill" meaning one thousandth so 1000 grams = one kilogram "kilo" meaning one thousand e.g one kilometer = 1000 meters and one meter = 1000 "milli" meters
Depending on wich context: Ex : Mg (mega gram) Ml (mega meter) Refer to 1000000 times gram or meter or Ex :12M mean 12 "moles per litre" which is a scientific concentration mesurement.
100mg = 100,000 micrograms (1000mcg per mg).
No. A "cc" (cubic centimeter) is an old term for a milliliter (ml) which is a unit of volume. A milligram (mg) is a unit of mass.
The density of magnesium is 1738 kilograms per cubic meter or 1.738 grams per cubic centimeter.
parts per million (ppm) and milligams per cubic meter (mg/m3)
We're not sure what your "mg" and "sm" represent,but we're pretty sure the answer is "no".1 newton = 1 kilogram-meter / second2 .
The answer is 23,417 mg.
mg/cc
1 cubic cm = 1cc = 1 miliiliter = .001 liter 1 gram = 1000 mg 1 gram/cc = 1000 mg/.001 liter = 1,000,000 mg/liter
1,000 kilograms/m3 = 1 kilogram/liter = 1,000 grams / L (0.012 mg) / [ (1,000 gram/liter) (1,000 mg/gram) ] = 1.2 x 10-8 liter
mg is milligram, a measure of weight. Liter is a measure of volume. A liter of WATER would weigh 1 million milligrams- but a liter of alcohol would weigh about 700,000 mg- since alcohol is lighter than water. A liter of mercury would weigh MUCH more, since it is heavier than water. So, to answer your question, we would need to know a liter of WHAT?
If i understand the question correctly, basically you want to make your standard 1/5 the conc of the stock. Therefore, 300ml stock diluted up with solvent
The formula for newton third law is F=mg
Bulk Density of salt is 1.154 grams per cubic centimeter. So 1 gram is 0.8666 cubic centimeters, and 1 milligram is 0.0008666 cubic centimeters. Or about 1/5688 teaspoons.
No. 1 cc equals 1 g (not mg) of water. The gramme is defined as being "the mass of one cubic centimetre of water". Strictly speaking, the kilogramme is defined as being the mass of one cubic decimetre of water. ... but 1cc = 1 mg? Definitely not, unless you are talking 1 cc of a material with a density of 1 mg per cc.