No. Oil is less dense than water, so 1 liter of oil will weigh less than 1 liter of water.
Chat with our AI personalities
not counting the weight of the bucket itself, the oil would weigh around 37 pounds.
you would need the exact density of the specific fish oil you are working with, a quick google search did not bring up any useful density numbers for various fish oils. however, oil of most kinds if less dense than water, i.e. it floats. we also know that one litre of pure water weighs one kilogram, so knowing that oil is a less dense we can say with confidence that one litre of fish oil weighs less than 1 kg. i found a number for crude oil of 0.9g/ml, using this number one litre of this oil would weigh 0.9kg or 900kg.
1 cubic centimeter or 1 milliliter of pure water weighs 1 gram. Forget syrup or oil. That weighs more.
Only if you have pure water in mind, then: 0.2 milliliters of pure water weigh 0.2 grams or 200 milligrams. Forget syrup or oil. For those calculations you need the specific weight (density) of the material.
none because kg are measuring mass and litres are measuring liquid.