It depends on the temperature and pressure of hydrogen or to have the hydrogen density value.
A typical density for milk is 1.03 kg/ liter. Thus, 5 kg = 5/1.03 = 4.854 liters.
Bee honey 1 liter is equal to approximately 1.44 kg. However; in fractions 1 liter of bee honey is approximately 1 11/25 kg.
it's 0.85 kg
A litre of water is equal to 1 Kg.
Just divide this by the density of gold - about 19 kg/liter. The result will be in liters (equal to cubic decimeters).Just divide this by the density of gold - about 19 kg/liter. The result will be in liters (equal to cubic decimeters).Just divide this by the density of gold - about 19 kg/liter. The result will be in liters (equal to cubic decimeters).Just divide this by the density of gold - about 19 kg/liter. The result will be in liters (equal to cubic decimeters).
No.
One liter of standard pure clean water at standard temperature and pressure has a mass of 1 kg.
Not comparable - a liter is a unit of volume, a kilogram is a unit of mass. For specific substances, if you know the density, mass = volume times density.
If we are considering water, then: 1 Liter = 2.204684 lb 1 Liter = 1.000028 Kg
1270 Liter Methane is equal to One KG LPG
1000
Sesame Oil has a Density of 0.916-0.920 Kg/Liter