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.
one cubic decimeter, or the volume of one kilogram of water
"Liter" is a unit of volume. "Kilogram" is a unit of mass. They don't directly convert, and in order to calculate how much of one corresponds to how much of the other, you have to know what substance is in the liters. -- If it's air, then it takes many many litres to make one single kilogram. -- If it's water, then each liter is almost exactly one kilogram. -- If it's gold, then each liter is more than 19 kilograms. -- And if the liters are empty, then there are no kilograms in them at all.
It depends on the type of gasoline, and other factors such as temperature and pressure, but gasoline has an approximate density of 737.22 kilogram/cubic meter. 737.22 kilogram/cubic meter = 0.73722 kilogram/liter = 737.22 gram/liter 42.4 liters * 0.73722 kilograms/liter = 31.258 kilograms or since you wanted grams, not kilograms... 42.4 liters * 737.22 gram/liter = 31258 grams(http://forum.onlineconversion.com/showthread.php?t=1114)
grams per liter is a measurement of density. A milliliter is a measurement of volume. They are not the same.
Only 3 liter of pure water weighs 3 kilogram.
If the water is at standard temperature and pressure (25 degrees Celsius and one atmosphere), the water has density of 1 kilogram per liter. When submerged, the metal displaces its own volume of water. Therefore, the volume of the metal is 1 liter, and the density of the metal is 6 kg/liter.
At 15 degrees Celsius, there are about 0.82 kilograms per liter of kerosene. Conversely, there are about 1.22 liters of kerosene per kilogram.
i think a ten liter container at 800 degrees Celsius has more heat
nothing
Density rho = mass / Volume. Water has a density of 1,000 kg/m3 = 1,000 g/L = 1.000 kg/dm3 = 1.000 kg/L = 1.000 g/cm3 = 1.000 g/mL at the temperatur of 3.98 degrees Celsius. Density rho = mass / Volume. Water has a density of 1,000 kg/m3 = 1,000 g/L = 1.000 kg/dm3 = 1.000 kg/L = 1.000 g/cm3 = 1.000 g/mL at the temperatur of 3.98 degrees Celsius.
Mass. NOT weight.
That depends on the substance. There is no general conversion from kilogram to liter, since kilogram is a unit of mass, and liter is a unit of volume.
Liter is a unit of volume, kilogram is a unit of mass. You have to divide the volume by the density of the substance, to get the mass.Liter is a unit of volume, kilogram is a unit of mass. You have to divide the volume by the density of the substance, to get the mass.Liter is a unit of volume, kilogram is a unit of mass. You have to divide the volume by the density of the substance, to get the mass.Liter is a unit of volume, kilogram is a unit of mass. You have to divide the volume by the density of the substance, to get the mass.
one liter
None. Liter is a measurement of volume and kilogram is one of weight.
Divide the density in kilograms per liter by the volume in liters
The volume of a kilogram varies depending on the substance being measured, as it is a unit of mass and liter is a unit of volume. The conversion from kilograms to liters also depends on the density of the substance. To find the volume in liters, you need to know the density of the material.