The question, as stated, cannot be answered sensibly. A kilogram is a measure of mass, with dimensions [M]. A Newton is a measure of force, with dimensions [MLT-2]. The two measure different things and basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information.
The force associated with a mass of 10 kg could be its weight, in which case the 10 kg mass needs to be multipied by the accelaration due to gravity. This varies over the surface of the earth but is generally taken to be 9.8 metres per second2. Using that value, the weight of a 10 kg mass would be 98 Newtons.
Convert this to kilograms, then multiply with the gravity (9.82 meters per square second). The result will be in Newtons.Convert this to kilograms, then multiply with the gravity (9.82 meters per square second). The result will be in Newtons.Convert this to kilograms, then multiply with the gravity (9.82 meters per square second). The result will be in Newtons.Convert this to kilograms, then multiply with the gravity (9.82 meters per square second). The result will be in Newtons.
Mass is in kilograms - weight is different. Say if someone says they weigh 50 kilograms this is wrong - their mass is 50 kilograms. You multiply their mass by the force of gravity (around 9.8 Newtons on Earth although we'll round it to 10) so each kilogram has a weight of 10 Newtons (even though it is 9.8, we are rounding). So you simply multiply 50 by 10 to obtain 500 Newtons. So mass is measured in kilograms and not to be confused with weight.
'Newtons' re the named units of force. The basic Systeme .Internationale(S.I.). units of force are kilograms(kg) and acceleration (m/s^(2)). When combined/multiplied as 1 Newton = 1 N = 1 kgms^(-2) or 1 kg*m/s^(2).
65.3173013 kilograms ==
-3
100 newtons = 10.2 kilograms
If you convert 3 newtons into kilograms which measure mass you have 0.30591486389338 kg.
Technically, you can't convert kilograms (a mass unit) into newtons (a force unit).
10 kilograms.
On Earth, 10 kilograms of mass weighs 90.81 newtons. (rounded) In other places, the same mass has different weight.
You cannot convert from newtons to kilograms because the newton is a force unit and the kilogram is a mass unit. However, near the surface of the earth, a 22.9-kg mass would weigh 225 newtons.
Convert that to kilograms. Then multiply by 9.8 to convert to newtons. This assumes standard Earth gravity.
Divide the Newton's by 9.8 N=mg m=N/g
It weighs 2.2 kilograms - if you want to convert kilograms into some other unit of measure, you need to say which unit you want to convert into.
Kilograms
You can't really convert kilograms to newtons, since they measure different things. The relationship is:weight = mass x gravity For normal Earth gravity, you can use a factor of about 9.8 newton/kilogram for gravity.
On Earth, 10 kg of mass weighs 98.1 newtons (22.05 pounds). (rounded)