The volume of 50 grams of salt can vary depending on the density of the salt. The density of table salt is approximately 2.16 g/mL, so 50 grams of salt would be roughly 23.15 mL.
If the density of table salt is 0.92 grams per ml, then there are approximately 4.5 grams of salt in one teaspoon, usually considered to be 5 ml.
1 tbsp of water is 15 grams . it is also 15 ml.
That's going to depend completely on the substance you are measuring: If it's 1.5 grams of air, it will fill many many ml. If it's 1.5 grams of water, it'll only take up about 1.5 ml. If it's 1.5 grams of gold, then that'll fit in about 0.079 ml.
The weight of salt can vary depending on the type, but on average, about 5 milliliters of table salt weighs roughly 6 grams.
One tablespoon is equal to 15 ml.
For a volume of approx. 5 mL the mass is approx. 7 g.
One cup of syrup of 314 grams, which means it is about 0.75 grams per mL. A tablespoon is 15 mL, therefore there are 11.2 grams per tablespoon.
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.
The answer is 364 mL.
The mass of a 15 ml sample of mercury would be approximately 166.5 grams. Mercury has a density of 13.6 grams per milliliter, so by multiplying the volume (15 ml) by the density, you can calculate the mass.
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.