1 kg = 1000 grams
1 gram = 0.001 kg
A kilogram is much heavier than a milligram is. Just one kilogram is equal to 1000 grams or one million milligrams.
A2. A kilogram equals 2.204 pounds.
The prefix "kilo" means 1000. 1 kilogram is 1000grams or 2 kilometers is 2000 meters. So 13.5 kilograms would be 13500 grams.
The density of an object (or the material the object is made of) relates the volume (size) to the mass (weight).In the SI system this is grams per cubic centimeter and water has a density of 1 (exactly one at 4 degrees centigrade)Note that kilograms per liter (cubic decimeter) and tons per cubic meter are the same as grams per cubic centimeter.
The formula is:weight = mass x gravity.On Earth, "gravity" is about 9.8 meters/second2, equivalent to 9.8 newton/kilogram. That means that each kilogram has a weight of 9.8 newton. On other planets, the "gravity" part will be different. For example, on Mars, the gravity is about 3.7 newton/kilogram. Thus, a man with a mass of 100 kilogram (that's well above the average, but simplifies calculations...) would weigh about 980 newton on Earth, and about 370 newton on Mars.
A gram is a unit of weight, one kilogram = 1000 grams. Thus 750 grams is 3/4 of a kilogram of apples.
1 kilogram! -------- 1 kilogram = 1000 grams thus; 1 kilogram > 13 grams
If the object is small, weighing no more than a pound or two. A kilogram ( 1,000 grams ) = 2.2 pounds, approx. Thus, anything larger should be measured in Kg, since it is much simpler to describe an object's weight as 3.5 kg, rather than 3,500 grams.
A kilogram is much heavier than a milligram is. Just one kilogram is equal to 1000 grams or one million milligrams.
One kilogram equals 1000 grams. Thus, 60 grams divided 1000 grams equals .06, which can be expressed as 6 percent.
A2. A kilogram equals 2.204 pounds.
6000 grams - 6*1000 - it takes 1000 grams for 1 kilogram, thus multiplying by 6 gives 6000 grams for 6 kilograms.
5000. "Kilo" means 1000. Thus there are one thousand grams (g) in a Kilogram (kg).
One pound of weight on Earth is equal to 454 grams, and 1,000 grams equal 1 kilogram. Thus, a kilogram on Earth is about 2.2 pounds, so 400 kilos = 880 lbs. Note that a kilogram measures the amount of matter in an object, and pounds measure the amount of gravitational force on an object. So one kilogram on a planet smaller than Earth, (IE, Mercury,) would weigh far less than 1 lb, and a kilogram would weigh much more on a larger planet, like Jupiter.
Close to the Earth's surface, each kilogram has a weight of about 9.8 newton. Thus, you must simply multiply the mass by 9.8 (newton/kilogram).
1 kilogram (kg) equals 1000 grams (g). Thus, 425 kg equals 425,000 g.
Units of weight based on a decimal system of 1000 gram = 1 kilogram, invented by the French and thus resented and rejected by the English!