To find out the weight of one mole of strawberries, you would have to know the exact chemical composition of a strawberry and each strawberry would have to retain that exact ration of elemental makeup. Once you find that out, add up all the atomic weights of the elements in their empirical ratio and that is the number of grams in a mole. If you are referring to the animal, which I doubt, then I cannot answer this question with any confidence, and I do not believe that anyone else can, either. However, I could be wrong. Good luck with the task!
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No, one mole of Mg contains the same number of atoms as one mole of He. This is because one mole of any substance contains Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23) of particles, regardless of their atomic number.
mg is milligram, a unit of mass. mmol is millimole - a unit of amount of a substance. 1 mole is equal to 6.023 x 10²³ atoms (or molecules, depending on the substance). For any particular substance, a mole of the substance will have a certain mass. Take hydrogen, for example. Hydrogen exists in nature as a diatomic molecule H2. A hydrogen atom by itself has a mass of 1 gram/mole, so the molecules of hydrogen are 2 grams/mole. So if you had 1 mmol of hydrogen gas, it would be equal to 2 mg. So to answer the question, the particular substance needs to be known.
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By definition, one mole would be the same as the atomic mass. You take the number of moles and multiply it by the atomic mass (divide by one mole for units to cancel). So if you have just 1 mole, the number of grams will be the atomic mass. Helium's atomic mass is 4.003 grams.