Welcome to the forum, Sillybananas. Not understanding unit conversions does not make you dumb. It means you need help learning the material. Which is not possible for us to do without seeing what exactly you are having trouble with. This is why the forum rules require you to show your work. It's for your benefit as much as for ours.
Also, it's not possible for everyone to access external websites. Therefore, you have a better chance of receiving help if you post the questions in the forum instead of linking to documents elsewhere.
Of course no problem!!!!
Okay so for question #2, the question asks if there is anything wrong with the set-up of the conversion problem of:
16.5*(3.154*10^10 ms/1 year)=5.20*10^11 milleseconds
I answered that there was nothing wrong with the problem set up but there is a formatting error. Having barely any basic knowledge on conversion, I don't see what's the problem. Years is cancelled by the denominator then you multiply the 16.5 with the 3.154*10^10.
The other answers that can be a possibility are shown in the picture I'll be uploading.
Now, with #12, I was very confused. The question asks to find the density in g/mL of a 1.80*10^-2 kg block of metal with the dimensions of 0.4981 in x 0.531 in x 0.5839 in. How I started was by converting 1.80*10^-2 kg to grams which I got 18 g with. Then I multiplied the dimensions to get 2.53075841 (I had a calculation of 2.3 mL in the picture but I redid it and 2.531 idk why). After getting the dimension and volume, I put it in the mass/volume formula to get 7.11 g/mL.
Tin has the closest density to that so would tin be right? And how would I apply the significant rules on here? Since 1.80 from the 1.80x10^-2 has the lowest amount of significant figures (apart from nickel having 8.9 g/mL as a given), will I have an answer with 3 significant figures?