Yes, it does.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoof course not
1 kg
12 kg or 1/6th.
1 kg = 1000 grams 1 gram = 0.001 kg
yes
of course not
In-between15 to 18 Kg.
Yes. Kilogram is the unit of mass.
No, according to Newton's second law of motion (F = ma), the force required to double the velocity of an object is dependent on the mass of the object. So, the 2 kg mass would require the same amount of force to double its velocity as the 1 kg mass.
1 kg
This is a play on words. Sulfur weighs 2 kg when dry because that's its actual weight. When wet, it weighs 1 kg because the water added decreases its weight to 1 kg. When burned, the sulfur combines with oxygen from the air, increasing its weight as part of the chemical reaction with oxygen to form sulfur dioxide.
1 kg
1 kg
The 1 kg weight of tie wire is still 1 kg and can't be converted.
A litre of water is 1 Kg. A litre of plain flour is about 540 grams. -So water is almost twice the weight.
12 kg or 1/6th.
With a simple balance you can find the weight (weight = mass in this case) of air. I propose the following method. Take the weight of the container (suppose it is a 1 litre container). And the weight is x kg. Take weight of the container full of water, say it is y kg. Weight of 1 litre of water is 1 kg. So the weight of the container is 'y -1' kg. So the weight of the air in it is 'x - y +1' kg. It should be around 1.2 gm.