The National Academy of Sciences has done limited research on this. In 2005, they published a Dietary Reference Intake book and it lists kilocalories required for children, but only for a specific height and weight. They plan on doing more research.
you gain weight
You will gain weight, simple as that.
The answer is 0.001 kilojoules in a joule 1J = 0.001kJ
why is it necessary to monitor the calories intake of children
No. But similar. 1 kilojoule = 0.239005736 kilocalorie. 1 kilojoule = 0.238845897 calorie (nutritional)
For female children ages 4-8, a daily intake of calories should be 1200 kcal/d. For female children ages 9-13, a daily intake of calories should be 1600 kcal/d. Calorie estimates are based on a sedentary lifestyle, in a temperate environment.
None. A gram is a measure of mass, a Joule (or kilojoule) is a measure of energy. And without going into nuclear fusion it is not possible to convert from one to the other.
Older children and adults can adjust their intake of lactose depending on how much and what they can tolerate.
I may be wrong, but kilo I think stands for 1000. Since a kilojoule is larger than a joule, I believe that you have to move the decimal point to the left. For example you would have less than 1 whole kilojoule in a joule, so it would be some thing like .00001 or something to that effect.
KJ stands for Killjoy.
1 kilojoule = 1,000 joules
KJ means kill joy