you multiply the milligrams by 10,000, and you should get hectograms. The better question is why you need to use hectograms in the real world.
10 g = 1 dag = 0.1 hg = 0.01 kg = 0.00001 Mg 10 g = 100 dg = 1000 cg = 10000 mg = 10000000 µg
1 gram = 0.01 hg.1 gram = 0.01 hg.1 gram = 0.01 hg.1 gram = 0.01 hg.
45 hg = 450 dg.
To compare the two quantities, we need to convert them to the same unit. 1 kg is equal to 10 hg, so 10 kg is equal to 100 hg. Therefore, 10 kg is bigger than 125 hg because 100 hg is greater than 125 hg.
420 hg equals how much cg
There are 100,000 mg in 1 hg!
I suppose by Hg you mean hectograms? 1 hg = 100 grams, and 1 mg = 1/1000 gram. There are therefore 100,000 mg in a hg, or 1 mg = 10-5 hg. So 17.37 mg = 17.37 x 10-5 hg, or 1.737 x 10-4 hg
35.781235
0.0014356
.00201 (:
Forty-five milligrams of mercury.
Not sure but it is not Hg or Mg.
Hg is not a change, it is an element. It can undergo changes, both physical and chemical.
h = hecto = 100 m = milli = 0.001 25mg = 0.00025hg
The change in vascular pressure is a decrease of 17 mm Hg (35 mm Hg - 18 mm Hg).
Yes. A milligram is one thousandth of a gram, whereas a hectogram is 100 grams.
Lead (Pb) and Mercury (Hg) will not spontaneously donate electrons to copper in solution because they are lower in the reactivity series than copper. Sodium (Na) and Magnesium (Mg) are more reactive than copper and could potentially donate electrons to copper in solution.