That's not actually a real math question.because any object could be 1kilogram.. You can have 1kilogram of feathers.1kilogram of rocks.1kilogram of sand etc
Just about any object you care to name. If you make something bigger or smaller, you can usually make it weigh exactly 1 kiogram.
No. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 newtons. On the Moon, the weight of each kilogram is about 1/6 of what it is on Earth.
A kilogram.A kilogram.A kilogram.A kilogram.
( Assuming mass of object on incline plane is in kilograms (kg) ) . Force pulling down incline on object (kilogram force) = object mass * sin (incline angle) . Force of object acting on and normal to incline (kilogram force) = object mass * cos (incline angle) . Mechanical Advantage = 1 / ( sin ( incline angle ) )
1/1000 kilogram.1/1000 kilogram.1/1000 kilogram.1/1000 kilogram.
A 1 kilogram object weighs approximately 2.2 pounds.
cantelope
on a scale
A litre of water weighs about 1 kilogram at room temperature.
An object that weighs 1 kilogram or more can include items like a bag of sugar, a full water bottle, a small melon, a laptop, a small cat, or a brick.
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.
An egg weighs less than 1 kilogram - or an apple.
Due to atmospheric pressure the weight of 10 kg of cotton is grater than 10 kg of iron.
No, the inertia of an object is directly proportional to its mass. In this case, a 2 kilogram iron brick has twice the mass of a 1 kilogram iron brick, so it also has twice the inertia.
A baseball is less than a kilogram.
Just about any object you care to name. If you make something bigger or smaller, you can usually make it weigh exactly 1 kiogram.
A 1 kilogram object would weigh approximately 2.2 pounds on Earth.