Don't, you can't.
yes, as grams is far too heavy
A litre is a unit of volume and a kilogram is a unit of mass (weight). You can not directly equate different units of measurement.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The Units are not compatible, It depends upon the substance. The weight of a liter of a substance varies with the substance and, to a small extent, its temperature. A liter of Mercury weighs much more than a liter of water.A typical answer is: 1 liter of water "weighs" 1 kilogram, but don't forget it's water at 3.98 degrees Celsius or 39.164 degrees Fahrenheit.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------There are two problems with this common answer, which is why I am not just changing the answer.1. The kilogram is not a unit of weight, it is a unit of mass. So it is incorrect to say that a liter of water weighs one kilogram. In fact one liter of pure water has a mass of one kilogram.2. Technically this conversion is not exact since the density of water changes depending on it's state. Since a liter is a unit of volume, then, since water expands when frozen, a liter of solid ice has less mass than a liter of liquid water. Water is maximally dense at near 4 degrees Celsius.These are two different variables Kilograms is unit of mass, and liter is a unit of volume. To relate both you would need to know the density of the material. (Density = mass in kg/ volume in Liters)However, for water at 4°C, one kilogram is the weight of 1 liter.
13,243.24 tons.
They do not directly convert. Cubic feet is a measure of volume while square feet is a measure of area.
No.. you dont have grands of sand, if you mean grain.... Let's say for the present queston it is a medium-grained sand averaging about 0.2 mm (0.02 cm) in diameter. Assuming the grain is an approximate sphere, the volume is about 5 x 10^-6 cubic cm. The density is 2.65 g/cubic cm. 2.65 * 5*10^-6 = 13 * 10^-6 g, or 13 micrograms. do it yourself to make sure I didn't make any conversion or other errors. Lee.W
1 kg is still 1 kg no matter what the substance is. a kilogram weighs 2.2 lbs brewski
A kilogram is a kilogram, no matter what.
A kilogram of sand takes up much less space than a kilogram of feathers because sand is denser than feathers. Density refers to how much mass is contained in a given volume. Since sand particles are heavier and more compact than feathers, they occupy less space for the same mass.
No. A kilogram is a kilogram is a kilogram. On the other hand, a kilogram of sand will most likely be a different size than a kilogram of gravel. We are told by the question though that they both weigh one kilogram, so they are the same weight.
They both have the same mass.
It's the same weight
The weight of one kilogram is always 1 kilogram. It doesn't matter what material you are weighing.
yes, as grams is far too heavy
A kilogram is a measure of weight, 1000 g. If water, 1g equals 1milliliter. so 1 kilogram of water equals 1 liter. There are approx 30ml per ounce, so 1 kilogram of water equals approx 33 ounces, or a little more than 1 quart
There are 1000 milliliters in 1 liter. One milliliter is 0.001 liter.
because sand is smaller than feathers and it would take up as much space with the sand , and if the feathers were there it would take up more space because its and larger object than the sand .
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