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In a standard insulin syringe, 60 units of insulin typically corresponds to 0.6 ml, as most insulin syringes are calibrated to deliver 100 units of insulin per ml. Therefore, if you draw up 60 units, you would fill the syringe to the 0.6 ml mark. It's important to always verify the calibration of your specific syringe to ensure accurate dosing.
We cannot answer because we don't know what units you are talking about -- do you mean quarts, units of blood, units of insulin ... what? Please rewrite the question to say what units you want to know about.
It depends on the type of insulin being used: For 100U insulin, 1 unit = 1/100 or 0.01 cc. For 40U insulin, 1 unit = 1/40 or 0.025 cc.
12Infinitely many all different:As it is only the area that matters, the perimeter can be any shape:An equilateral triangle (with sides approx 3.398 units)A square (with sides approx 2.236 units)A regular pentagon (with sides approx 1.705 units)A regular hexagon (with sides approx 1.387 units)A regular heptagonA regular octagonA regular nonagonA regular decagonA regular hendecagon (11 sided polygon)A regular dodecagon (12 sided polygon)A regular triskaidecagon (13 sided polygon)A regular 14 sided polygonA regular 15 sided polygonA regular 16 sided polygon...A circle (with radius approx 1.262 units)And there are also the non-regular shapes, eg an L shaped hexagon, a kite, a parallelogram which can have an area of 5 square units.
The area of a regular hexagon with side lengths of 10 units is about 259.8 units2