bcz oil has less density than water ..
More ;]
The question being WHY, it is because when the metric system was devised it just ended that way. On the other hand, the British Quart is actually larger in volume than the liter where the US quart is smaller by volume than the liter. By the way this difference in standards between the different countries is what led to the founding of the metric system, a way of globalising weights and measures.
1 liter of water weighs 1 kilo, so diesel would a bit less.
The word kilo means thousand, so a kiloliter is 1000 times more than a liter. the word kiloliter isn't used much, though.
No, a liter does however burn faster due to the fact that it is burning butane rather than wood.
A kilogram is a unit of mass or weight rather than a number.
The prefix "kilo" usually means 1000. "Kilometer" is no exception. (In computer science, "kilo" is sometimes taken to mean 1024, rather than 1000.)
It depends largely on what it's a kilo of--a kilo of brick dust is much less expensive than a kilo of steel, which is less expensive than a kilo of uranium.
They are both 1 Kilo. So, no.
No, being a kilo, they are both the same weight
Whenever you're working with metric units, you'll find that the prefix "kilo-" usually means "a thousand"."Kiloliter" means "a thousand liters".That's definitely larger than a liter, I'm pretty sure.
Yes, it is less than a kilo. There are 1000 grams in a kilo, so 360 grams is just over 1/3rd of a kilo.