That depends on the gravity. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 Newton.
If it weighs 98 newtons on Earth, then we know that its mass is about 10kg. If that figure is its weight somewhere else, then its mass is something else.
On earth, 10 kg of mass weighs 980 Newtons (22.05 pounds), regardless of what kind of object it is, or what's in the bag.
a pound of anything weighs the same, a pound!!
Both the 10kg stack of books and the 10kg piece of Styrofoam weigh the same amount, 10kg, because weight is a measure of the force due to gravity acting on an object's mass.
That depends on the gravity. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 Newton.
On earth, 10 kg of mass weighs roughly 98 newtons.
They both weigh exactly the same, namely 10kg, but 10kg of cotton would have considerably more volume than 10kg of iron.Both On the earth,weighs same. both will be having different weight ,if you consider cotton on earth and iron on the moon. W=M*g *Also , if you are having precision instrument and if you measure and ironblock and cotton[in loose],loose cotton weighs more (whatever be the amount due to entrapped air!)
If it weighs 98 newtons on Earth, then we know that its mass is about 10kg. If that figure is its weight somewhere else, then its mass is something else.
Why do think a 10 kg iron ball weighs 10kg where ever its place of origin be. like wise avagardo no is also constant.
It would weigh 10kg.
10kg = 22 (22.0462) lbs.
On earth, 10 kg of mass weighs 980 Newtons (22.05 pounds), regardless of what kind of object it is, or what's in the bag.
10kg as it is 8.7kg bigger than 1.3kg
10kg of 250kg expressed as a fraction is 1/25