It doesn't make sense to convert between meters and kilograms. Those are units that measure completely different things.
10 m = 10000 mm
The kilogram is the mass per unit length and m is the two do not compare.
10 to 15
Remember K H D | d c m. Kilograms is three places to the left of grams. So you have to move the decimal place three times to the left. So in this case the answer is 0.204 kilograms.
Answer: 10000 m = 10 km
m = ( 8.17 kg ) ( 1000 g /kg ) ( 100 cg / g ) m = 8.17 x 10^5 cg <---------------
100 Kg-m/s
1 Newton = 1 kg*m/s2The force of weight (W), expressed in Newtons, equals the mass of the object (measured in kilograms) times "g" (a constant that represents the acceleration due to gravity).W = m*gOn Earth, g = 9.81 m/s2. But we physicists are lazy, and like to call it 10 instead.So, Weight (in Newtons) = mass (in kilograms) x 10 m/s2.
Remember K H D | d c m. Kilograms is three places to the left of grams. So you have to move the decimal place three times to the left. So in this case the answer is 22 kilograms.
On earth, 19.8N is about 2.02kg (m = F/a)
Newton(N)=Force(F) F=m(mass) x g(gravitational acceleration) ;g=9,8m/s x s ~10 m/s x s F=453 x 10=4530 N
F = M a 15 = M (1.5) M = 15 / 1.5 = 10 kilograms
10 m = 10000 mm
Remember K H D | d c m. Kilograms is three places to the left of grams. So you have to move the decimal place three times to the left. So in this case the answer is 0.001 kilograms.
Assuming you are on Earth where the acceleration due to gravity equals 9.81 m/s^2 and Force (newtons) = mass ( kilograms) * acceleration ( m/s^2) then 10 kg * 9.81 m/s^2 = 98.1 Newtons.
One kg = 1000 grams. So one gram is 10^-3 kilograms. One milli gram is 10^-3 gram = 10^-6 kg. Kilograms and grams are both the metric units of mass. So the answer is 5 KG
One kg = 1000 grams. So one gram is 10^-3 kilograms. One mili gram is 10^-3 gram = 10^-6 kg. Kilograms and grams are both the metric units of mass. So the answer in kg is 3.2751 gram = 1/1000 kilograms3275 gram = 3275/1000 = 3.275 kilograms