Assuming the medium is fresh water at room temperature and atmospheric pressure, then the density is 1 gram per one milliliter
28000 grams = 28000/1 = 28000 milliliter = 28 liters (as 1 liter = 1000 milliliter)
One milliliter of water weighs one gram.540 liters is 540 000 milliliters of water.540 000 milliliters of water weighs 540 000 grams540 000 grams is 540 kilograms
2,800,000,000
No 1000 kilograms is 1 000 000 grams
all of the above except grams, liters.
100 000 grams
28 000 grams is equal to 28 kilograms. To convert grams to kilograms, divide by 1000 since there are 1000 grams in a kilogram.
One milliliter of water weighs one gram.540 liters is 540 000 milliliters of water.540 000 milliliters of water weighs 540 000 grams540 000 grams is 540 kilograms
Yes. Grams use the same standard unit conventions as meters, bytes, liters, and anything else that uses the Greek naming conventions for unit sizes. So the next units smaller than milligrams would be: 1 microgram = 0.000 001 grams 1 nanogram = 0.000 000 001 grams 1 picogram = 0.000 000 000 001 grams 1 femtogram = 0.000 000 000 000 001 grams 1 attogram = 0.000 000 000 000 000 001 grams 1 zeptogram = 0.000 000 000 000 000 000 001 grams 1 yoctogram = 0.000 000 000 000 000 000 000 001 grams
Multiply US gallons by 3.785 to get liters. 60 million gallons is 227,100,000 liters.
2,800,000,000
Liters can't be converted to grams. Liters measure volume, while grams measure mass.
The prefix kilo means 1 000, so a kilogram is 1 000 grams. 5kg is 5 x 1 000 grams = 5 000 grams.
Yes. 15 000 000 mL = 15 000 L
Liters can't be converted to grams. Liters measure volume, while grams measure mass.
Liters can't be converted to grams. Liters measure volume, while grams measure mass.
1 gigagram = 1 000 000 000 grams
The question was asked in a roundabout way, but I think you mean that if a saturated solution of sodium chloride (salt) and water contained 2 grams of sodium chloride and 5 liters of water, than how many grams of salt would be needed to make a saturated solution with 28 liters of water. First off, the one unit you gave me was mass, and the other was volume, so technically I couldn't discover how many grams of salt would be needed. However, if I can safely assume that the water in the first and second example were under the same conditions, than the answer would be 11.2 grams. Next time you submit a question be sure you are clear about what you're asking, otherwise you may receive an answer that doesn't adequately address the question you meant to ask.