If you mean "one kilogram", then the answer is Yes.
It's mass remains the same. It is weight that changes. Important difference. If it is a true vacuum, it will be weightless.
10.4km is the same as about 6.5 miles.
No, they refer to the same thing: kilograms
Greater in what way? They both have the same mass. Aluminium, being less dense will have a greater volume, but being more abundant will have a smaller value.
Those are incompatible units, in the sense that a newton is a unit of force, while a tonne is a unit of mass (equal to 1000 kilograms). On Earth, with a gravity of 9.8 meters per second squared, a mass of one ton has a weight of 9800 newton (or 9.8 kN). In other situations, the same mass of one ton will have a different weight.
1 kilo is normally used to refer to 1 kilogram. This is a measure of mass and is NOT the same as weight. A mass of 1 kg is a mass of 1 kg - wherever it is.
No.
That depends on how much cork you have. If you have a large piece, then it will have more volume and more mass. If you only have a tiny piece, then the volume and the mass will both be very small. The volume and the mass will always change together like that, in the same direction. The only thing you can always be sure of is that no matter what size piece of cork you have, the grams of mass will always be about 0.2 times the volume in cubic centimeters.
Bulk white sugar weighs 880 kilograms/cubic meter. Bulk table salt weighs 1154 kilograms/cubic meter. So no, salt and sugar don't have the same mass. Further They do not have the same density. 1 kilo of sugar has the same mass as 1 kilo of salt.
66
same because of the mass
because a kilo doesn't change no matter the temperature or pressure. Mass is always the same.
a kilogram and a kilo are the same thing
The aluminium bat is hollow.. Im pretty sure thats right! :)
It's actually exactly the same. A kilo and 1kg are the same.
20.3g Al
They weigh the same.