Sainsbury's supermarket sells 1kg of granulated sugar for 98p here in the UK.
under density of 1g/ml yes
This depends on the density of the solution and density depends on the concentration of sugar.
0.45359237kg for an approximate result, divide the mass value by 2.20462262
Note: the fact that they are barely floating means that the person's density is equal to the density of water. Given: density of water = 1kg/litre Let V be the volume of the person. We want densityperson = densitywater => 50kg/V=1kg/litre =>V=50 litres Therefore the volume of the person is 50 litres.
15342 in 1kg of sugar
Sainsbury's supermarket sells 1kg of granulated sugar for 98p here in the UK.
The UK standard pack of sugar weighs 1Kg
Unit of density is 1kg/1000 cm3 because Density = Mass/Volume
How much salt is in 1kg of water
well the density of water at 25 oC is approximately 1kg/L. So about 1 L
under density of 1g/ml yes
Say you buy a 1kg bag of sugar for £1 1kg=100g 100g=£1 1g= 1p In short you will be buying sugar 1p per gram.
They both weigh the same: 1kg = 1kg. The kg of butter has a greater volume and the kg of lead has a higher density.
Neither, both weigh the same. However, I kg of popcorn would take up much more space than 1 kg of sugar.
Say you buy a 1kg bag of sugar for £1 1kg=100g 100g=£1 1g= 1p In short you will be buying sugar 1p per gram.
7.2 Kg (Density of water is 1Kg/Liter)