0.99997200078397804861463879011388 liters.
I think the question is incomplete. You can not possibly mean how many litres are there in 1 kilogram. The two units describe two different quantities. Kilogram is a unit of mass while Litre is a unit of volume.
1 kilogram of water equals 1 liter.
1 kilogram
One liter of water is 1 kilogram.
A litre is 1 Kilogram of water.
Eighteen liters of water, or an eighteen kilogram dumbbell.
It depends on what you are measuring. If it is water, 1 litres is 1 kilogram.
The conversion of kilograms to liters depends on the density of the substance. For water, 1 kilogram is equivalent to 1 liter, as the density of water is 1 g/cm³. For other substances, you need to know the density to convert kilograms to liters accurately.
"Liters" count a region in space. "Kilograms" count mass of a substance. The number of liters that 1.00 kilogram fills depends on the substance. If the substance is air, then 1.00 kilogram of it fills many liters. If the substance is water, then 1.00 kilogram of it fills roughly 1.0 liter. If the substance is lead or stone, then 1.00 kilogram of it fills only a small part of a liter.
A litre is 1 kilogram of water.
160lbs / 2.2 = 72.7272kg 1 liter water = 1 kilogram =72.7272L
There is one liter of water in a kilogram of water. There will be more or less of other liquids depending on the density of the liquid.
"Liter" is a unit of volume. "Kilogram" is a unit of mass. They don't directly convert, and in order to calculate how much of one corresponds to how much of the other, you have to know what substance is in the liters. -- If it's air, then it takes many many litres to make one single kilogram. -- If it's water, then each liter is almost exactly one kilogram. -- If it's gold, then each liter is more than 19 kilograms. -- And if the liters are empty, then there are no kilograms in them at all.