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).
Density = mass/milliliters Density = 10 grams/2 ml = 5 g/ml ---------------
The density of bromine is 3.12 g/ml, therefore 10 ml of bromine would weigh 31.2 grams.
10 grams of egg whites is approximately equal to 10 ml.
That is 10 grams of liquid creamer.
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 ml
10 GRAMS
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.
No, mL are a unit of volume and grams are a unit of mass. 1 mL of water has a mass of 1 g
It's (the total mass of the liquid, in grams)/10 grams per cm3