You can multiply the numbers as normal but what you need to be careful about is what happens in the dimensions.
mL*gram will have dimensions [M][L3], where M represents mass and L represents length. The resulting dimensions are not ones that you come across often.
mL*cm3 will have dimensions [L6] which is a volume in 6-dimensional space! Something even less likely to come across.
However, if these are intermediate stages in calculations, the final dimensions may still make sense.
It's (the total mass of the liquid, in grams)/10 grams per cm3
1 cm3= 1 ml so 10,000 cm3= 10,000 mL = 10 Litres.1 cm3= 1 ml so 10,000 cm3= 10,000 mL = 10 Litres.1 cm3= 1 ml so 10,000 cm3= 10,000 mL = 10 Litres.1 cm3= 1 ml so 10,000 cm3= 10,000 mL = 10 Litres.
Grams per cm3 (or mL) or kg per litre.
d=m/v where d= g/mL or g/cm3 m=grams i am not sure what h is but i think you meant to do a g and not a h . v=m/d v=4500/7.5g/ml (grams cancel out and you are left with mL) v=600mL hope it helped!
That's pretty simple math actually. To make it 1g/mL you'd have to add 150 grams of suger. So you'd divide by grams by ten (which gives you 15). 15 grams is 0.1g/mL so then multiply 15 x 6. That gives you 90. 90 grams of sugar is 0.6g/mL.
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The mass of 15 ml of a liquid with a density of 1 g per cm3 can be calculated using the formula: Mass (g) = Volume (ml) x Density (g/cm3). So, 15 ml x 1 g/cm3 = 15 grams. Thus, the mass of 15 ml of this liquid would be 15 grams.
Since 1 ml = 1 cm3, the density is 5 grams per cm3
It's (the total mass of the liquid, in grams)/10 grams per cm3
Multiply by ' 1 ' to convert either unit to the other. They're identical volumes.
one to one. One mililiter equals one cubic centimeter.Replace the ml units by cm3 units(1 ml = 1 cm3)
The density is exactly 5/40 = 1/8 = 0.125 gram per liter.A more common unit for density is "gm/cm3". In order to do the conversion to thisunit, we note that 1 liter = 1,000 ml, and the 'ml' and 'cm3' are identical volumes.40 liters = 40,000 cm3(5 grams) / (40,000 cm3) = 0.000125 gm/cm3
1 cm3= 1 ml so 10,000 cm3= 10,000 mL = 10 Litres.1 cm3= 1 ml so 10,000 cm3= 10,000 mL = 10 Litres.1 cm3= 1 ml so 10,000 cm3= 10,000 mL = 10 Litres.1 cm3= 1 ml so 10,000 cm3= 10,000 mL = 10 Litres.
Grams per cm3 (or mL) or kg per litre.
It's called displacement. You take a beaker or some measuring container and fill it up with water to a certain marker. Then, you put in whatever you need to measure, and however much the water rises from the original marker, that's the volume of the object.
Something with a density of 2.4 g/cm3.
you need the density of the liquid. if the density is 1g/ml, 25ml = 25g