For water 1kg=1 litre.
but for other solutions u need to knw the density of solution.
by the unit of mass .the relation between mg and dag is written as 1 dag=10000 mg.
The conversion between m cube and kg cannot be converted to each other .On finding the relation we get as follows . Density = kg/cubic m.
The terms liter, meter, and gram are not numerical values, but units of metric measure. In SI units they are the meter (m) for distance, liter (L) for volume) and kilogram (kg) for mass. Gram is not an SI unit but a derivation and subunit of kg. 1 gram equals .001 kg.
A kiloliter is much bigger then a liter. If you have one kiloliter, then you have 1,000 kiloliters.
Liter is a unit of measurement for volume, while the kg measures mass. Depending on the material, you want to know how much it weighs (more specifically its density), a liter of something can weigh as much as ~23kg (i think osmium or another transition metal is the densest material), or as little as... nothing (think of vacuum).
There is no relation between litres and centimeters
Both volume measure. 1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter
1 kg = 1000000 mg
1 litre = 1.003 kg 1.5 liter =1.565 kg
1 liter = the volume of 1 kg of water at 4C
Density = mass divided by volume, measured in kg per cubic metre
1 litre = 1 Kg
The density of petrol varies, depending on its composition. 20 thousand litres would weigh between 14200 kg and 15400 kg.
.912 kgs
It depends on the metal. Lithium has lower density than water: 0.534 kg per liter. Copper is 8.94 kg per liter. Tungsten, which is now used as sinkers for fishing is 19.25 kg per liter. Osmium is the density champion at 22.59 kg per liter.
Sesame Oil has a Density of 0.916-0.920 Kg/Liter
Kg is weight Liter is volume. It takes one liter of water to get one kilo of weight. Other substances will be different.