yes it is. on earth at least.
The weight of 1 kg is 1 kg on Earth. If the force is to be determined, it is 9.8 Newtons due to gravity.
A force of 9.8 N is the force exerted on a 1 kilogram mass at rest by the force of Earth's gravity at sea level. So 10 N is the force of about a 1.02 kg mass (approximately 2.25 pounds force)This is a scalar measurement.
Weight assuming your talking about the force pulling us to the ground is measured in newtons. To find out the amount of newtons an object has you measure its mass(kilograms,grams etc.) and multiply its mass by 10. Example if a book had a mass of 1kg its weight is 10N.
A 10 kg box weighs a touch more than 98 newtons (98.0665002864).
1kg = 1000g 200/1000 = 2/10 = 1/5 or a fifth
1kg=9.81N
1kg = 10 Newtons Shift your decimal place back one digit. Then you have 15.19 newtons.
9.8 Newtons
On earth, 1kg is 9.8 newtons.
There are 9.81 newtons in 1 kilogram weight.
Usually accepted is that 1KG = 9.81N. That means 100g is 0.981N, and 10g is 0.0981N.
9.8 newtons (2.205 pounds) (both rounded)
The weight of any object is caused by the gravitational field of the nearest, large object. For a 1kg mass on the Earth its weight is about 10 Newtons. On the moon, the same 1kg mass would have a weight of about 2 Newtons.
The force with which Earth attracts a body of mass 1kg on its surface is approximately 9.81 Newtons.
On Mercury, 1kg would weigh approximately 3.7 Newtons. This is due to the lower gravitational pull on Mercury compared to Earth (approximately 38% of Earth's gravity).
1kg is 9.8N (mass x 9.8 = N)
Weight of 1 Kg Brick = 9.8 Newtons