it's 0.85 kg
Only in volume, but not in weight.
A liter of water is roughly equal to a kilogram in weight.
18.977 kilos of water equal 5 US gallons.
The weight of water is approximately 1 kg per liter. So a 15 liter water gain would equal 15 kg weight gain.
There is no straight answer, because litres are a measure of volume, but kilos are a measure of weight. You need to specify the substence, maybe water, petrol, wheat, feathers. 203 litres of each would weigh different amounts.
250 pi kilograms
One liter of water weighs approximately one kilogram, as water has a density of 1 kg/L.
The weight of an object in water is equal to the weight of the object in air minus the weight of the water it displaces. The weight of the object in air is 35N. To calculate the weight of the water displaced, we need to convert 1 liter of water to kilograms (1 liter of water is approximately 1 kg). Therefore, the weight of the body in water would be 35N - 1kg x 9.81 m/s^2 ≈ 25.19N.
One liter of water is almost exactly one kilogram.
assuming density is 1g/cm3, 1 liter should weigh 1 kilogram
Since 1mL of water is equal to 1g, then 1000mL (or 1L) is equal to 1000g (or 1kg). Thus: 1L = 1kg.
Their color, taste, alcohol content, weight, history, chemical composition, and methodsof preparation are different. But since each is 1 litre, their volumes are equal.