It is not clear why 08 has a preceding 0: is it meant to be 0.8 or .08? Also, what is meant by "g mL" after 08: is it meant to be just mL or g/mL? "g mL" is not a sensible measurement unit.
n : 2 l : 1 ml : -1, 0, or 1
The correct answer is 2s. n = 2 corresponds the 2nd energy level and l = 0 corresponds to the s-subshell. You did not need to know ml = 0 to get the answer
Yes. It is just under 1 gram per cubic centimetre. 0.998 207 1 g/cc at 20 deg C and 1 atmsophere, 0.999 972 0 g/cc at its maximum density at 4 deg C and 1 atmosphere.
-2
I dnt know
cc is same for ml. so 0.87cc = 0.87mls
No. A cc (cubic centimeter) and a mL (milliliter) are equal to each other in terms of volume.Therefore, 3 cc = 3 mL.
In a 2.5ml/2ml syringe measurement is given in 0.1ml intervals.So for 0.75ml you have to take in between the 0.7 and 0.8ml mark.0,5ml,1ml.1.5ml are marked by large lines and 0.ml intervals by small lines.
Using the ideal gas law, (P1V1)/T1 = (P2V2)/T2, where P is pressure, V is volume, and T is temperature. Assuming constant pressure, the new gas volume at 0 degrees Celsius can be calculated using the initial volume (25 ml) and temperatures (22 degrees Celsius and 0 degrees Celsius). By plugging in the values and rearranging the equation, you can find the new gas volume in the syringe after immersing it in the ice bath.
As water has a specific gravity of 1, 10ml = 10cc. Now, a centimetre is a unit of length, equal to 1/100 of a metre; thus, 1 cc = 1/1,000,000 of 1 metre. Therefore, 10 cc = 10/1,000,000 cubic metres = 1/100,000 of a cubic metre.
120 cc to find the cc of a villiers you simply see the model ie c12 add a 0 o that then you have 120 cc if it was a mk15 add a 0 then its 150 cc Regards, Dan
0 .. im just 10 years old ..
2.5 mL is equal to one teaspoon. Many times, when prescribing different types of liquid drugs, doctors will refer to mLs.
This is an, "Ask your Vet" as the dosage is calculated by weight and concentration of the drug in the form purchased. Numbers of infections mimic allergy symptoms which your Vet can sort out. They also use tablet and injectable cortical steroids, which last much longer if it's an allergy problem. So, ASK if there is an equally effective, less expense treatment available.
They are: N-CC
This depends on the age of the patient and the methodology used. To give you a general idea, I've listed the reference ranges used by my laboratory: • <1 year: 0-15 IU/mL • 1-5 years: 0-60 IU/mL • 6-9 years: 0-90 IU/mL • 10-15 years: 0-200 IU/mL • Adults: 0-100 IU/mL