1 kg=1000 grams
1 mg=1/1000 grams i.e., 1 kg=1000000 mg.... so 1 kg has more mass.
Neither! They both have the same mass of 1 Kilogram.
Ofcourse 1 Kg
There are 1 million mg in 1 kg, so the kg apparently seems to have more mass.
One milligram (1mg) is one thousandth of a gram, and one kilogram is one thousand grams. Therefore, there are 1000x1000mg in 1kg. There are 1000000mg in 1kg, so there are 4000000mg in 4kg.
Since kilograms are the unit we use to measure mass, the answer is no: both have 1kg. of mass. :D
Neither! They both have the same mass of 1 Kilogram.
Ofcourse 1 Kg
yes. a mass of 1 kg weighs 2.2 pounds on Earth.
The 2kg brick has more inertia than the 1kg brick. Inertia is directly proportional to an object's mass, so the higher the mass, the greater the inertia.
1kg of iron contains more matter and occupies less space than 1kg of cotton. Iron is denser than cotton, so it has a higher mass-to-volume ratio.
There are 1 million mg in 1 kg, so the kg apparently seems to have more mass.
Oh, dude, that's an easy one! So, 1 kilogram is like 1000 grams, right? And if you have 200g objects, you just divide 1000g by 200g, which gives you 5 objects. So, like, you'd need 5 of those 200g objects to have the same mass as 1kg. Easy peasy!
It is: 5kg-1kg = 4kg
One milligram (1mg) is one thousandth of a gram, and one kilogram is one thousand grams. Therefore, there are 1000x1000mg in 1kg. There are 1000000mg in 1kg, so there are 4000000mg in 4kg.
Since kilograms are the unit we use to measure mass, the answer is no: both have 1kg. of mass. :D
The weight of an object on Earth is the same as its mass, which is 1kg in this case. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object's mass.
1000mg=1kg 1mg=1/1000 kg 80mg=80/1000 kg\ 80mg=0.08kg