Density of ice is 917 kg/m3 Volume is mass/density is (1kg)/(917 kg/m3)=1.09x10-3m3 and 1 litre=1m3 then 1 kilogram of ice is 1.09x10-3 litres.
Because it is smaller in volume.
no
i think 1kg of ice
The mass of an entity will remain constant, independent of temperature. It is always the volume that changes. Take water for example: When you have measure 1kg of liquid water in a closed container of dimensions 1m x 1m x 1m (it is closed so no water will evaporate), its mass will remain 1kg whether the room is 7°C or 45°C. As the volume of the container is 1m3, the density of the measured water is 1kg.m-3. [Density is mass / volume] Now assume the water is frozen (below 0°C), its volume will increase due to its expansion. As the density of ice is less that of water, the ice will float (hence why we get icebergs in the sea). The mass however will remain the same as nothing has been added or taken away. N.B - water is at its most dense at 4°C.
1kg = 1000g ice will have volume: Density = mass /volume Volume = mass / density Volume = 1000/0.92 Volume = 1,086.95ml = 1,087ml 1,087 ml = 1.087 liters.
Without knowing the density of an object, it's not possible to calculate it's volume by weight. A 1kg piece of granite and a 1kg piece of igneous rock would be very different in volume.
Copper will have the larger volume because it is less dense than gold.
1.237
1000g
Density of ice is 917 kg/m3 Volume is mass/density is (1kg)/(917 kg/m3)=1.09x10-3m3 and 1 litre=1m3 then 1 kilogram of ice is 1.09x10-3 litres.
10 ml
Because it is smaller in volume.
Nooo, 1kg gold is heavier 1kg cotton, because the last one has much more volume than the first, so Archimedes force reduces weight of a cotton more!
They both weigh the same: 1kg = 1kg. The kg of butter has a greater volume and the kg of lead has a higher density.
Under standard conditions (25oC, 1atm), the density of air is about 1.168kg/m3. Hence 1kg of air would have a volume of: 1.168kg/m3 divided by 1kg = 0.8562m3
They are all Metric measurements.