The density of water at 4°C and 1 atm is 1000 g/L. Density drops a little bit outside that temperature, but generally the change is negligible.
So basically, 1 L of water weighs 1 kg.
1 kilogram of water is equivalent to 1 liter of water, as the density of water is 1 gram per cubic centimeter. This means that 1 kilogram of water occupies a volume of 1 liter.
The mass and volume of water was used to define the SI units for weight and volume, and is almost exactly 1 gram per milliliter (1 gram/cm3).Although this changes slightly with temperature, one gram of water is one cc or one mL of water.A liter of water at 25°C weighs about 0.997 kilograms.
1 litre of water can be a Kg.
Not possible to answer - a litre is a measurement of volume, while a kilogram is a measurement of weight!
It depends on the density of the material whose volume you are using. With pure water 1 milliliter = 1 gram 1 liter = 1 kilo What could be simpler? :-)
A kilo
Certainly not. There are one hundred grams in a kilo.
One kilo of water is exactly a litre
1 kilo liter = 1000 liters 1 liter = 1/1000 kilo liter = 0.001 kilo liter
A KILO-gram
I would use a gram on a scale because meter is distance, liter is volume, milli is very small, and kilo is very large.
One liter of water is 1 kilogram.