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.
420 hg equals how much cg
125 hg, although I have yet to come across anywhere that uses the measure.
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.
Hg will not spontaneously donate electrons to copper.
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.
It cannot because Mg appears only once.
h = hecto = 100 m = milli = 0.001 25mg = 0.00025hg
Yes. A milligram is one thousandth of a gram, whereas a hectogram is 100 grams.