A kilogram is a measure of mass therefore a kilogram of lead and a kilogram of feathers have the same mass: one kilogram. They would, however, have different volumes and densities.
A foot is a unit of length. A kilogram is a unit of mass. You can't convert one to the other.
A kilogram (kg) is a measure of mass in the Metric system.
No. Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight.
A kilogram is a measurement unit for mass. There is no numerical aspect to it.
You have to be totally ignorant of the mass of a dollar bill or a kilogram (or both).
The average mass of current U.S. bills is one gram.
None. A kilogram is a measure of mass while a dollar is a measure of monetary value. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
The mass of a dollar bill is approximately 1 gram.
Current US bills have a mass of approximately 1 gm regardless of denomination.
Half a kilogram is the mass in this case.Half a kilogram is the mass in this case.Half a kilogram is the mass in this case.Half a kilogram is the mass in this case.
If we assume that the mass of paper is the same in a bill of each denomination, andthe mass of ink in each is also the same, then the value of any mass of $10-bills is10 times the value of the same mass of $1-bills.So the difference in their value is nine times the number of bills in either pile.
The mass of a US one dollar bill is approximately 1 gram.
1 kilogram = 1,000 grams
You would need the mass of a dollar bill in the currency you are interested in. Your question is ambiguous, and could be about bills each worth $100 or about hundreds of bills each worth $1. Even "pound" could refer to mass, weight, or English currency.
There is unit of mass called a hectogram = 0.1 kilogram. But there is no such unit as a hecto kilogram.
A liter of water has approximately a mass of one kilogram.