The weight of ceramic tile typically ranges from about 1,500 to 2,500 kilograms per cubic meter, depending on the specific type and density of the tile. Standard ceramic tiles generally weigh around 1,800 to 2,200 kg/m³. Factors such as thickness, material composition, and manufacturing processes can affect the exact weight. Always check the specifications provided by the manufacturer for precise values.
Kilogram per cubic meter is the one that doesn't belong. Square meter is meter^2 and cubic meter is meter^3 but kilogram per cubic meter is a density
This is no a possible conversion, because you can not convert a factor of distance (metre) to a weight (kilogram)
what is the weight of salt water of one cubic meter
no
It is to different things. A meter is a measurment of length and kilogram is measuring weight
Kilogram per cubic meter is the one that doesn't belong. Square meter is meter^2 and cubic meter is meter^3 but kilogram per cubic meter is a density
This is no a possible conversion, because you can not convert a factor of distance (metre) to a weight (kilogram)
790 kilogram wheat will be present in a cubic meter.
By a 'kilo' I assume you mean a kilogram, but this is a weight. A cubic meter is a volume. You can't compare them. You have to specify what the material is, to know the volume of a 'kilo', before you can work out how many in a cubic meter
No, grams and kilograms are units of mass/weight. Cubic meters are a unit of volume.
You are trying to convert weight to mass. There is not nearly enough information.
You can't convert just Kgs. to cubic metres. A kilogram is a measure of weight while a cubic meter is a measure of size.
By a 'kilo' I assume you mean a kilogram, but this is a weight. A cubic meter is a volume. You can't compare them. You have to specify what the material is, to know the volume of a 'kilo', before you can work out how many in a cubic meter
Mass: kilogram, length: meter, volume: cubic meter, density: kilogram / cubic meter, temperature: celcius or kelvin.
These are all easy to find in your book: Length . . . . . . . Meter Mass . . . . . . . . . Kilogram Volume . . . . . . . Cubic Meter (* Liter is 1/1000th m3, or one dm3) Density . . . . . . . Kilogram per cubic meter Time .. . . . . . . . . Second Temperature . . . Kelvin or Celsius degree (same size)
315 Kg/M3 approx.
A cubic meter is one thousand liters. It is designed to relate to the weight of water, so one liter weighs one kilogram. A cubic meter of water weighs one thousand kilos, or one metric ton.