That's going to depend on where it is. It has about one kilogram of mass,
so on Earth, it's going to weigh about 2.205 pounds (9.8 newtons).
It does not weigh one kilogram. If it did, and you took it to the moon, then
you'd have one kilogram of mass that weighs 0.163 kilograms. That would
really be awkward.
1,1056 kg at 20 0C
Roughly $600
The percentage of deuterated water (D2O and HDO) in normal water is approx. 0,015 %.
Roughly $600 per liter.
One liter of water has a mass of about one kilogram; therefore, its weight (on Earth) will be about 9.8 Newton.
how many cups of water in a liter
Roughly $600
The percentage of deuterated water (D2O and HDO) in normal water is approx. 0,015 %.
7.2 Kg (Density of water is 1Kg/Liter)
By definition, the mass of one litre of pure water at room temperature is one kilogramOne litre of water weighs in at 1 kg/ 2.2 lb.
Roughly $600 per liter.
Density has nothing to do with how heavy an object is. Density is mass divided by volume; if you take (for example) a liter of water, it will have a density of 1 kg/liter; if you take 1000 liters of water, the density will still be 1 kg/liter.
The volume of 1 liter of water is 1 liter.
one liter is always one liter it doesn't matter if it is in a water bottle or or a bucket
Yes
A liter is a unit of volume not weight, therefore to determine how much a liter weighs it depends on what you're measuring. A liter of water has a different weight than a liter of sand and so on.
1 liter
Well, it depends. One liter of what? If it is water, it is one kg, since for water 1ml = 1g. 1 liter (water) = 1000 grams