Depends on the density of milk, @ 15 deg celcius, varies from 1.02 to 1.05 kg / l
So no, 1 litre of milk varies between 1.02 kg and 1.05 kg
Any other object with a mass of 1 kg that is weighed in the same locality. (The earth's gravity varies from place to place). Or ten objects, each with a mass of 100 grams, etc.
No. mg is a unit of weight. ml is a unit of volume.
Meter is a measure of length and litre is a measure of volume. You question is the same as asking "Is one foot of walking equal 10 cups of milk?"
ANSWER NO 1 liter = 0.26 gallon so 2 liters is about the same as a half of liquid gallon
1 liter = 33.6 fluid oz. 1 liter = 4.2 cups 1 liter = 2.1 pints 1 liter = 1.06 quarts 1 liter = .26 gallon
Equivalent in what?The mass should be almost the same, since milk consists mainly of water.The nutritional value, of course, is not the same.Equivalent in what?The mass should be almost the same, since milk consists mainly of water.The nutritional value, of course, is not the same.Equivalent in what?The mass should be almost the same, since milk consists mainly of water.The nutritional value, of course, is not the same.Equivalent in what?The mass should be almost the same, since milk consists mainly of water.The nutritional value, of course, is not the same.
It has about 12g per cup. It should be noted that skim, 1%, 2%, and whole milk all have the same amount of sugar per serving.
A US quart is almost a liter (0.95 of a liter).
The mass of the sugar remains the same.
A liter is the same as kg. 47 lbs = 21.3 kg = 21.3 liters. Milk weighs almost exactly the same as water Raw milk doesn't weigh the same as water because of the solids content of milk, so you can't do a straight conversion of mass to volume: 47 lb. milk * 8.6 lb/gal = 5.47 gallons 5.47 gallons * 3.7854 liter/gal = 20.69 liters in 47 lb. raw milk
Bulk white sugar weighs 880 kilograms/cubic meter. Bulk table salt weighs 1154 kilograms/cubic meter. So no, salt and sugar don't have the same mass. Further They do not have the same density. 1 kilo of sugar has the same mass as 1 kilo of salt.
Mass doesn't change. Maybe you're thinking density?
the mass of an object is the same, no matter where it is.
Its not the same, vato.
No, volume and mass are related but they are not the same. As an example, 1 liter of water has a mass of 1 kg whereas 1 liter of mercury has a much higher mass. Mathematically, Mass divided by volume is equal to density. Mass has units of Kg and volume has units of m3.
A weighed unit of liquid milk has exactly the same mass as an equal unit by weight of frozen milk. However frozen milk has a lower density than liquid milk.
NO! They are not the same and not interchangeable. Sweetened condensed milk: Cow's milk with sugar added, reduced by evaporation to a thick consistency. evaporated milk: Milk product with about 60% of the water removed from fresh milk