On Earth, multiply the mass (in kilograms) by 9.8, to get the weight (in Newtons). In this case, you must first convert grams to kilograms.
Also, although weight is formally in newtons, as stated above, you can (inaccurately) generalize that, since acceleration due to gravity on Earth is 9.8 meters per second squared, the weight of a 4.5 gram bug is 4.5 grams.
.15 grams adult
A giant water bug can weigh anywhere from 2 to 5 grams, depending on the species and its size.
A bug can contain about 5 grams to 15 grams of protein.
bug bites TFK?
Put the bug on a sensitive scale.
There is little mass to the bug compared to an automobile.
1900lbs
very, very little
Snugness is proportional to the inverse square of the size of the object being snugged and directly proportional to the size of the object doing the snugging, represented by the ratio of Sr/(Mb)2, with Sr being the area of the snugging object and Mb being the mass of the object being snugged. Therefore, assuming that the rug is a standard floor rug of 12 1/2 by 10 feet, and the bug being the common shield bug with a mass of about 1.5 grams, the equation, using correct sig figs, would be: (12.5 *10)/(1.52) = 55 snuggles, the unit of snugness.
0.6 grams
Go to google.com and enter in child of the earth bug, and a bunch of websites will come up, the best one was at Wickapedia.com
South American water bugs are the biggest bugs on Planet Earth. They may belong to either the species grandis or maximus within the Belostomatidae true bug family genus Lethocerus and will measure 3.5+ inches (9+ centimeters) in their native Latin American habitats.