Please note that weight (or force in general) and mass aren't really equivalent. The relation is:
Weight = mass x gravity.
Assuming normal Earth gravity (i.e., close to Earth's surface, each kilogram has a weight of about 9.8 newton. For something to weigh 1 newton, it will have to have a mass of 1 / 9.8 kilograms; this is approximately 102 grams.
Yes, energy and mass are equivalent according to Einstein's famous equation E=mc^2. This equation shows that mass can be converted into energy and vice versa under certain conditions, such as in nuclear reactions.
The mass equivalent to one newton of gravitational force is approximately 0.102 kilograms.
"Kg" is an abbreviation for 'kilogram', which is a unit of mass. "Newton-meter" is a unit of work (or energy). These two units are used to measure different quantities, they have different physical dimensions, and they can't be converted into each other.
According to Newton's second law Force is equivalent to mass times acceleration.
On Earth, each kilogram has a weight of about 9.8 Newton, so a weight of a Newton is equivalent to a mass of about 102 grams.
1 newton is force equivalent to about 3.6 ounces . 1 pound is force equivalent to about 4.49 newtons .
You need to multiply the mass with the value of gravity; near Earth's surface that value is approximately 9.8 newton/kilogram.
Earth's gravity is about 9.8 meters per second square, or the equivalent 9.8 Newton per kilogram - so you just multiply the mass with 9.8. Weight will be in Newton.
Weight = mg (mass x gravity). g stands for gravity. Normal Earth gravity is 9.82 meters / second2 or the equivalent 9.82 Newton / kilogram.Weight = mg (mass x gravity). g stands for gravity. Normal Earth gravity is 9.82 meters / second2 or the equivalent 9.82 Newton / kilogram.Weight = mg (mass x gravity). g stands for gravity. Normal Earth gravity is 9.82 meters / second2 or the equivalent 9.82 Newton / kilogram.Weight = mg (mass x gravity). g stands for gravity. Normal Earth gravity is 9.82 meters / second2 or the equivalent 9.82 Newton / kilogram.
You multiply the mass by the gravity. Normal Earth gravity is about 9.8 (in meters/second2, or the equivalent newton/kilogram).
Einstein's equation, E=mc2, says that energy and mass are equivalent and can be converted into each other.
The relationship is: weight = mass x gravity. For example, near its surface, Earth has a gravitational field of 9.8 meter/second2, equivalent to 9.8 newton/kilogram; therefore, a mass of - say - 10 kilograms will have a weight of 98 newton.