The number of kilojoules in a biscuit can vary widely depending on its ingredients and size. On average, a standard biscuit may contain about 400 to 600 kilojoules (approximately 100 to 150 calories). For more accurate information, it's best to check the nutritional label of the specific biscuit you are consuming.
The answer is 0.001 kilojoules in a joule 1J = 0.001kJ
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.
There are 2 in 'nugget in a biscuit' but 3 in 'chicken nugget in a biscuit.'
1 Kilojoule is equal to 1000 joules. So, 980 kilojoules x 1000 joules per kilojoule = 980000 joules.
Depends on the biscuit, usually not much.
you gain weight
Biscuit Bear has 32 pages.
A Joule is a Watt-second (or W=J/s). Therefore, 3.5 kWh = 3.5*3600 kWs = 3.5*3600*1000 W-s = 12.6 million Joules
You will gain weight, simple as that.
316 cal per biscuit
80 calories per biscuit
There are about 160 calories in one Grand's biscuit.