on a scale
Not really.Somethings weight is a measure of the mass of the object in a gravity field. therefore an object of mass 1 Kilogram will weigh 1 kilogram on Earth but only 1/3 of a kilogram on the Moon.For this reason we say stars / planets/ moons etc have mass not weight as it is mass that is the invariant property of matter not weight.
Just about any object you care to name. If you make something bigger or smaller, you can usually make it weigh exactly 1 kiogram.
1 cubic decimeter of pure water is 1 liter and weigh 1 kilogram. A mass of one kilogram is a weight of one kilogram at sea level. If you move your subject into space, it will weigh less. If you take it to Jupiter, it will weight more, but its mass will remain one kilogram.
To check if a pencil has a mass of less than 1 kilogram, you would weigh the pencil using a scale that measures in kilograms. If the scale reads less than 1 kilogram, then the pencil's mass is less than 1 kilogram.
they weigh the same amount because a pound of mashmallows is the sames as a pound of rocks because 1 pound=1 pound They are both the same.
On earth, 1 kilogram of mass weighs 9.8 newtons.
The "kilogram" is a unit of mass. Every kilogram has the same mass, no matterof what substance.The question is much like asking: "Which is longer, a mile in a car or a mile on a bicycle ?"
On Earth, 1 kilogram of mass weighs 2.205 pounds, regardless of what substance it happens to be. The same kilogram of mass has different weights in other places.
A 1 kilogram object would weigh approximately 2.2 pounds on Earth.
They weigh the same, as both are 1 kilogram. The weight is determined by the mass of the objects, and in this case, they are both 1 kilogram.
The mass of the sugar will remain the same, 1 kilogram, regardless of location. Weight (which is affected by gravity) is what changes depending on location. On the Moon, the bag of sugar will weigh less due to the weaker gravitational pull compared to Earth.
One liter of water would weigh approximately 1 kilogram, or 1000 grams.