The answer depends on what you mean by measurable. Modern inkjet printers deposit inks in volumes of just a few picolitres (trillionth of a litre or billionth of a millilitre). Smaller volumes can be measured and the limit, presumably is the Planck volume = approx 4.22*10-99 millilitres.
Here is a link of another question. :) http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_milligrams_equal_1_milliliter or you could just type "How many milligrams equal 1 milliliter?"
A milliliter of water weighs approximately 1 gram, so a body part that weighs about 1 milliliter would be equivalent to roughly 1 gram in weight. This could be as small as a paper clip or a small grape.
The smallest thing you could imagine - a dust grain, a molecule, an atom, a quark.
Units of measurement can be as big or as small as needed. In the metric system there are metres and kilometres but also decimetres and centimetres and millimetres. (or meters) Micrometres, = 1 x 10-6 or a millionth of a metre ( or a thousandth of a millimetre) Nanometres = 1 x 10-9m or a thousand millionth Picometres = 1 x 10-12m or about 31 pm is the width of a helium atom (a million millionths) It continues with a femto-, atto-, zepto-, yocto- What could be that small?
one disadvantage is that we could get a measurement mixed up with another measurement.
The smallest improper fraction I could make would be called one plus one over infinity. Technically, the smallest improper fraction is indistinguishable from an integer.
Here is a link of another question. :) http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_milligrams_equal_1_milliliter or you could just type "How many milligrams equal 1 milliliter?"
There are lots of answers, it could go on forever. But the smallest fraction would be 1/3 (one over three).
A milliliter of water weighs approximately 1 gram, so a body part that weighs about 1 milliliter would be equivalent to roughly 1 gram in weight. This could be as small as a paper clip or a small grape.
The greatest possible error for a measurement is typically half of the smallest unit of measurement. In this case, the smallest unit of measurement is 1 foot, so the greatest possible error for a 14-foot measurement would be 0.5 feet. This means that the actual measurement could be as low as 13.5 feet or as high as 14.5 feet.
A milliliter is one onethousandth of a liter, or could be writen as 1 milliliter=.001 liters
2.13" can be several different things. It can be a measurement of distance or it could be a mathematical number. 2.13 as a fraction would be displayed as 213/100.
A measuring jug.
It is an integer, not a fraction, but if you must, you could write it as 147000/1.It is an integer, not a fraction, but if you must, you could write it as 147000/1.It is an integer, not a fraction, but if you must, you could write it as 147000/1.It is an integer, not a fraction, but if you must, you could write it as 147000/1.
Objects do not "weigh" a volume measurement like milliliters, as weight is a measurement of force due to gravity acting on mass. However, a milliliter of water at standard temperature and pressure (STP) weighs approximately 1 gram, as the density of water is 1 gram per milliliter. So, a small object like a paperclip or a coin that displaces exactly 1 milliliter of water would weigh approximately 1 gram.
Impossible.
It could be 125+, rounded to the nearest 50, where the superscripted "+" indicates a number which is a tiny, tine fraction bigger than 125.