There can be no conversion.
A kilogram is a measure of mass. A cubic centimetre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
yes
1 m3 x 1000000 cm3/1 m3 x 2.75g/cm3 x 1 kg/1000g = 2750 kg
lb/ft3, kg/m3, 16.01846. lb/in3, kg/m3, 27679.90. lb/ft3, g/cm3, 0.01601846 ... in3/lb, cm3/kg, 36.127. W/(m K), BTU in /(hr ft2 F), 6.9334713 ...
density = mass / volume = 13 g / 5 cm3 = 2.6 g/cm3
The density of the 6 cm3 block of ice is approximately 0.67 grams/cm3. This can be calculated by dividing the mass (4 grams) by the volume (6 cm3).
yes
0.737 kg. The answer is correct but i tell the calculation density=mass/volume density of petrol at 60*f=737.22 kg/cm3 1 litre=1000 cm3 (1 cm3=1/1000 litre) 737.22(kg/cm3)=mass(kg)/volume(cm3) 737.22(kg/cm3) * volume(cm3)=mass 737.22 * (1/1000 litre)=mass(kg) 0.737 kg=mass There is no conversion. One is volume and the other is mass or weight.
g / cm3 * 1000 = kg / m3
1 gram = 1000 milligrams = 0,001 kilogram
Density of titanium, at room temperature = 4.506 g/cm3 so volume of 1 kg = 1000/4.506 = 221.9 cm3.
26 t(US) = 23586.803 kg
1 m3 x 1000000 cm3/1 m3 x 2.75g/cm3 x 1 kg/1000g = 2750 kg
1 gram/centimeter3 (g/cm3) equals 1000 kilogram/meter3 (kg/m3)
11.81 kilos
The SI unit of mass is the kilogram. Density is expressed in g/cm3 (grams per centimeter cubed)
1.0 x 1015 cm3 in 1 km3 (written in scientific notation for sanity's sake)which is a number that look like this:1 000 000 000 000 000
assuming density is 1g/cm3, 1 liter should weigh 1 kilogram