It depends on the force of gravity where the body is weighed.
1 kilogram is the mass of about 441dimes.
"Weight" is not measured in kilograms.If your mass was originally 150 kg and you lost 1 kg of mass, then you lost 2/3rds of 1 percent of your original mass.
Not really.Somethings weight is a measure of the mass of the object in a gravity field. therefore an object of mass 1 Kilogram will weigh 1 kilogram on Earth but only 1/3 of a kilogram on the Moon.For this reason we say stars / planets/ moons etc have mass not weight as it is mass that is the invariant property of matter not weight.
1 cubic decimeter of pure water is 1 liter and weigh 1 kilogram. A mass of one kilogram is a weight of one kilogram at sea level. If you move your subject into space, it will weigh less. If you take it to Jupiter, it will weight more, but its mass will remain one kilogram.
The weight of 1 kilogram of iron on Earth is greater than the weight of 1 kilogram of iron on the Moon. This is because weight depends on the gravitational pull of the celestial body, and Earth has a stronger gravitational force than the Moon.
Weight is measured in the metric system using the unit of mass, which is the kilogram (kg).
A kilogram (mass) on the moon is still a kilogram (mass)A kilogram (referred to as its weight) is about 1/6 of it's Earth weight or 160 g (approx)Aside: In common usage we talk about an object having a weight, not a mass (e.g. Your driver's license states your weight). In science a kilogram is a unit of mass. Weight is what we perceive when we try to lift that mass - it is the force of gravity pulling the kilogram mass to the Earth. It gets a bit confusing when you are at Earth's surface because a the kilogram mass has a numerically kilogram of force (usually referred to as weight) attracting it downwards.
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.
Yes it is. 1 kilogram is the same weight (mass) as about 2.2 pounds (2.2046 lb).
The mass is 1 kilogram anywhere. The mass doesn't change.The weight of 1 kilogram is 9.8 newtons (2.205 pounds) on earth,and 1.6 newtons (5.8 ounces) on the moon.
On earth, 1 kilogram of mass weighs 9.8 newtons.
1 kilogram of asphalt weighs 1 kilogram since the weight is equivalent to the mass.