This does not have a simple answer as a potato is a very complicated mixture of many different compounds ranging from those as simple as water to large carbohydrate and protein molecules made up of many thousands of atoms. Also the values will be different for every potato, as no two are the same even if its the same weight.
You would have to determine the number of moles of every compound independently, but you cannot add those values.
That would depend on the size of the potatoes. Sometimes I get baking potatoes that are quite large and there might be two and a half or three to a kilogram. More often I want the small fresh potatoes and then I will get fifteen or more to a kilo.
I'm sure that someone, somewhere has grown a single potato that weighs more than a kilogram. When you pick potatoes sometimes you will bring up a bunch that are as big as peas and you would need several hundred of those to amount to one kilogram.
That's going to depend on whether you pick small, medium, or large potatoes.
It also may depend a little bit on which of the following potato varieties you're using:
(List reprodiuced from Wikipedia):
None
Neither. Since they both have a weight of 1kg (kilogram) one cannot be heavier than the other.
Many kilograms.
which is36.2873896 kilograms
2.2 pounds per kilogram.
2.2 pounds per kilogram.
It depends on the size/mass of the potatoes. they are not all the same size.
Potatoes are sold by the kilogram.
The total mass is (1.5 + 2.35 + 1) = 4.85 kg
The size (and weight) of potatoes may vary widely.
A Kilogram is a unit of measurement, no matter what you are measuring, the larger number will have more mass
Exactly one kilogram is in a kilogram.
Neither. Since they both have a weight of 1kg (kilogram) one cannot be heavier than the other.
5 kilogram = how many grams 5 kilogram = how many grams 5 kilogram = how many grams
1 kilogram
As at July 2007, the retail cost of sweet potatoes was around two Australian dollars per kilogram.
Many kilograms.
there are 1,000,000 milligrams in a kilogram