N x 0.102 = kg
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.
This is no a possible conversion, because you can not convert a factor of distance (metre) to a weight (kilogram)
Conversion: stone x 6.35 = kg
You can use Newton's Second Law here: force = mass x acceleration. Your units are in SI, so you don't need any conversion. Answer will be in newtons.
No. Kilogram is a unit of mass only. Weight is measured in units of force; the SI unit for force is the Newton.
1 newton is 1 kg-m/s^2, there is no conversion. A kg is a measure of weight, while a Newton is a measure of force.
A newton
Kilogram is .
1 newton
About 9.8 Newton/kilogram (9.8 Newton force on every kilogram).
He didn't. The newton unit is defined as a kilogram-meter per second squared, meaning it does not predate the invention of the kilogram, meter, and (scientifically defined) second. The international prototype kilogram was standardized in 1889, so the newton does not predate this year, at least.
1kg of mass = 9.81 newtons 1kg = 9.81 newtons 1 newton = 0.101971621 kilogram-force 1 kilogram-force = 9.80665 newton Newton is not a unit of mass like the kilogram, it is a measure of force. A Newton is the amount of force that it takes to accelerate a mass at a rate of 1ms-2 The Earths gravity typically pulls 1kg. with a force of about 9.81N (N=Newton) but it varies a little depending where you are on Earth. So on Earth 0.102 Kg or 102 grams is one whole Newton
No, there is no standard Newton in a cabinet somewhere. The Newton is defined using the standards for the meter, kilogram and second.
500 gram
Newton, or (rather incorrectly) the kilogram.
About 9.8 Newton / kilogram.
0.102 kg