There is no equivalence.
A kilogram is a measure of mass. A litre 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.
If you are not convinced, consider a litre of air. How many kilograms? Next consider a litre of lead. How many kilograms?
The masses of equal volumes of the two substances will clearly be very different. So there is no direct conversion between mass and volume: you need to know the density of the substance to enable you to carry out the conversion.
Some people still believe that there is a conversion in relation to pure water but that is only approximately true. Until 1964 (nearly 50 year ago!) a litre was defined as the volume of one kilogram of pure water at 4 degrees Celsius and at a pressure of 760 millimetres of Mercury. With that definition a conversion would have been valid - but only for pure water and only under those conditions. In any case that definition of a litre was abandoned in favour of 1 litre =1000 cubic centimetres.
In fact the density of pure water, at 4 deg C and 760 ml of mercury is 0.999 972 0 kg/litre. At "room temperature" (20 deg C), the density of pure water at 1 atmosphere 0.998 207 1 kg/litre.
Fill 4 ltr jar State of two jars: (4, 0)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr: (0, 4)Refill 4 ltr: (4, 4)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar until it is full: (1, 7)Empty 7 ltr: (1, 0)Pour from 4 lts to 7 ltr: (0, 1)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 1)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar: (0, 5)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 5)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar until it is full: (2, 7)Empty 7 ltr: (2, 0)Pour from 4 lts to 7 ltr: (0, 2)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 2)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar: (0, 6)Done.
0.5
1 ltr = 1000 mlso, 147 ltr = 147 x 1000 = 147000 ml
20 -30
Momentum is mass multiplied by velocity. The momentum of the two ships would be 300 x 2 = 600 kgm/s and 300 x 1 = 300 kgm/s. So the combined momentum of the two ships would be 900 kgm/s.
.00288 kgm^2
Fill 4 ltr jar State of two jars: (4, 0)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr: (0, 4)Refill 4 ltr: (4, 4)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar until it is full: (1, 7)Empty 7 ltr: (1, 0)Pour from 4 lts to 7 ltr: (0, 1)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 1)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar: (0, 5)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 5)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar until it is full: (2, 7)Empty 7 ltr: (2, 0)Pour from 4 lts to 7 ltr: (0, 2)Fill 4 ltr: (4, 2)Pour from 4 ltr to 7 ltr jar: (0, 6)Done.
Fill 7 Ltr jug from well 7 Ltr jug ->(pour into) 5 ltr jug Unplug the 5 ltr jug 7 ltr jug -> 5 ltr jug fill 7 ltr jug from the well. 7 ltr jug -> 5 ltr jug unplug the 5 ltr jug (You will have 4 lrs in the 7 ltr jug and nothing in the 5 ltr jug) 7 ltr jug -> 5 ltr jug fill the 7 ltr jug from the well 7 ltr jug -> 5 ltr jug You will have 6 ltrs of water in the 7 ltr jug which you can put on the lever to open the gate Shailesh Singh Pakuranga, Auckland
kgm/s
kgm per second squared
919.99 kgm-3
A gear box for a 1989 2.6-ltr petrol Mitsubishi Pajero cannot fit on a 2.3-ltr diesel motor.
This question makes absolutely no sense !
Mass per unit volume (kgm-3)
100 kilograms = 220.462262 pounds
No, there are 1000ml in 1 ltr. Therefore 750ml is 3/4 of a litre.
if 10 to 1 is 1 ltr of oil for every 10 ltr of fuel then math is easy 5 ltr of fuel would get .5 ltr or one half liter of oil.