kPa is a force over an area and can also be written 1000 N/m2. Assuming you mean on earth you can figure out the newtons by multiply by gravity (9.81 m/s2). But you will still need to know the area this force is acting on to figure out the weight.
What a strange question. A kilogram weighs a kilogram whatever the substance involved. The volume of the substance will vary though, a kilogram of gold is a cupful but a kilogram of rice is a whole bagful.
kilogram
No, both weigh a kilogram
Not sure if this is a serious question but...A kilogram is a unit of mass, or in this case, weight.A kilogram is a kilogram.One kilogram of anything is a kilogram.1 kg of iron = 1 kg of wool.
kilogram
Yes.
1 bar is 100kPa
1 BAR = 100kPa = 14.5038 PSI
At stp or standard temperature and pressure, we have pressure = 100kPa and temperature=273.15 K
It's true...I think??
A kilogram is a kilogram, no matter what.
1 ksc (kilogram/square centimeter) is approximately 14.22 psi Do know that physicially that kg/cm2 is a wrong unit, the real unit should be N/cm2. +++ Are you sure? All the SI unit references I have seen use the Pascal (Pa), which equals 1N/m^2. For everyday use the Bar is permissible (standard sea-level atmospheric pressure, or 100kPa.)
Gram
What a strange question. A kilogram weighs a kilogram whatever the substance involved. The volume of the substance will vary though, a kilogram of gold is a cupful but a kilogram of rice is a whole bagful.
Exactly one kilogram is in a kilogram.
Half a kilogram is the mass in this case.Half a kilogram is the mass in this case.Half a kilogram is the mass in this case.Half a kilogram is the mass in this case.
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