No.
The mass of the substance is 20 grams in a 10 ml sample. Therefore, the substance has a density of 2 grams/ml. For a 200 ml sample of the same substance, the mass would be 400 grams (200 ml x 2 grams/ml).
The density of bromine is 3.12 g/ml, therefore 10 ml of bromine would weigh 31.2 grams.
Density = mass/milliliters Density = 10 grams/2 ml = 5 g/ml ---------------
That is 10 grams of liquid creamer.
10 grams of egg whites is approximately equal to 10 ml.
Density is calculated by dividing the mass of a substance by its volume. In this case, if the mass of the liquid is 10 grams and it occupies a volume of 1 mL, the density would be 10 grams per 1 mL, or simply 10 g/mL.
If water, it is the same number in ml or grams.
10 GRAMS
10 ml
No, mL are a unit of volume and grams are a unit of mass. 1 mL of water has a mass of 1 g
As water has a specific gravity of 1, 10ml = 10cc. Now, a centimetre is a unit of length, equal to 1/100 of a metre; thus, 1 cc = 1/1,000,000 of 1 metre. Therefore, 10 cc = 10/1,000,000 cubic metres = 1/100,000 of a cubic metre.
12 grams of water is equal to 12,000 mg of water and is the same as 12,000 ml of water.