203 pounds = 92.0793kg = about 903 newtons.
No. Kilogram is a unit of mass only. Weight is measured in units of force; the SI unit for force is the Newton.
A kilogram is a unit of mass, a Newton is a unit of force. They are not the same thing. On Earth, each kilogram has a weight of about 9.8 Newton, so assuming the 1 KN (1000 N) is a weight, you can divide 1000 by 9.8 to get the equivalent mass.
In the metric system they weight is measured in Newton. Not gram or kilogram, which are measures of mass, not weight.
A mass of 100 pounds, weighs approx 444.5 Newtons. A kilogram is not a measure of weight, a Newton is.
On Earth . . . -- 1 pound is the weight of 0.4536 kilograms of mass -- 1 newton is the weight of 0.10197 kilogram (101.97 grams) of mass -- 1 kilogram of mass weighs 2.20462 pounds (9.8 newtons) The numbers are different in other places.
mass is 0.0010 kg and its weight is 0.00981 Newton
Close to the Earth's surface, each kilogram has a weight of about 9.8 newton. Thus, you must simply multiply the mass by 9.8 (newton/kilogram).
Use the formula: weight = mass x gravity Close to Earth's surface, gravity is approximately 9.8 newton/kilogram.
The SI unit for mass is the Kilogram. The SI unit for weight in the Newton.
No. Kilogram is a unit of mass only. Weight is measured in units of force; the SI unit for force is the Newton.
Assuming you mean "weight", mass and weight are quite different things. The general relationship is: weight = mass x gravity For example, with normal Earth gravity of about 9.8 meter/second2 = 9.8 newton/kilogram, a mass of 1 kilogram has a weight of 9.8 newton.
Weight = mass x gravity. Weight (in newton) = mass (in kilogram) x gravity (in meter/second2, equivalent to newton/kilogram). Note: close to Earth's surface, gravity is about 9.8 meter/second2.
A kilogram is a unit of mass, a Newton is a unit of force. They are not the same thing. On Earth, each kilogram has a weight of about 9.8 Newton, so assuming the 1 KN (1000 N) is a weight, you can divide 1000 by 9.8 to get the equivalent mass.
Weight = mass x gravity. On Earth, gravity is approximately 9.8 meters/second2, which is the same as 9.8 newton/kilogram. That is, every kilogram has a weight of approximately 9.8 newton.
On Earth, each kilogram has a weight of about 9.8 Newton, so a weight of a Newton is equivalent to a mass of about 102 grams.
In the metric system they weight is measured in Newton. Not gram or kilogram, which are measures of mass, not weight.
If you mean a device to measure weight or force (expressed in newtons), that will measure force, not mass; but if you do that, you can get a pretty good idea about the mass, if you know the gravitational field. Near Earth, the gravitational field is approximately 9.8 newton/kilogram, so if you know the weight (in newton), just divide by 9.8 to get the mass (in kilograms).