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Mercury has a density of 13,6 grams per cubic centimeter. One liter has 1000 cubic centimeters One kilogram has 1000 grams 13,6 * 1000 / 1000 = 13,6 kilograms per liter One liter of mercury has a mass of 13,6 kilograms
KILOGRAM IS THE BASE UNIT FOR MASS yards are the best unit for math
no, grams are mass and centimeters are length, so you cant really know if its the same
1 kg = 1000 g so 2.4 kg = 2.4*1000 = 2400 grams. Simple!
1 Kilogram
1,000 Grams
Approximately 30 -40 grams of salts per kg
1 liter of H2O at 4 degrees C has a mass of exactly 1000 grams 1 liter of H2O at 4 degrees C has a mass of exactly 1 kilogram
Mercury has a density of 13,6 grams per cubic centimeter. One liter has 1000 cubic centimeters One kilogram has 1000 grams 13,6 * 1000 / 1000 = 13,6 kilograms per liter One liter of mercury has a mass of 13,6 kilograms
mass = volume * density Grams are a measure of mass. Liters are a measure of volume. You can use the internet to look up the density for the gas to which you are referring. For instance, hydrogen's density is .0000899 g/cm^3 (grams per cubic centimeters). One liter is 1000 cm^3. 1000 cm^3 * .0000899 g/cm^3 = 0.0899 g Therefore a liter of hydrogen contains about 0.09 grams of hydrogen.
That all depends on what substance fills the liter of space.A liter of air has a small amount of mass in it (very few grams).A liter of water has more mass in it (more grams).A liter of concrete has even more mass in it (lots of grams).An empty liter has no mass in it (no grams).
1 kilogram = 1000 grams = the mass of a prototype cylinder in Paris, France. also the mass of 1 liter of H2O at 4°C (1 liter = 1/1000 of a cubic meter)
1000 grams, assuming water density is 1000 gm/l
mass is to grams
You multiply by 1.04. 1000x1.04 is 1040g
it would have a mass of 100grams ------------------------------------------------------------------------ One kilogram (oe 1000 grams)
Grams are mass, liters are volume. So it would depend on the substance. Note ... with water (only) 1000 grams = 1 liter [by definition].