1 kg of aluminum has more volume.
Gold is a very unreactive element, so it occurs as gold metal in nature. However, aluminum is more reactive, and so it occurs in aluminum ore (aluminum oxide) in nature, not as aluminum metal.
A kilogram of butter as it is less dense than lead.
In an electrolyte cell with aluminum and gold electrodes, oxidation occurs at the aluminum electrode. Aluminum, being more reactive than gold, donates electrons and is oxidized to form aluminum ions (Al³⁺). The gold electrode, on the other hand, typically acts as the cathode, where reduction occurs as it accepts the electrons released from the aluminum. This movement of electrons generates an electric current in the electrolyte cell.
Aluminum is slightly harder than gold. In a way yes and in a way NO. It depends on the purity and the age of both metals. Pure gold - 24 carats is far softer than aluminum or aluminium, whereas 9 carat gold which is an alloy of gold and other metals may be harder. You also need to consider what happens to aluminum when it is exposed to the air and over time will deteriorate as it is chemically corroded and ages. It softens and loses its strength. Gold does not corrode, it does not deteriorate - it is classed as a noble metal. So long term gold is stronger, harder than aluminum. Aluminum is used in overhead power lines, airplanes etc., gold would be more efficient at transmitting electricity, but it would be useless to construct an airplane.
Kg is weight, L is volume. They're different things and can't be readily compared.
Aluminum has a lower density than gold, meaning the same mass of aluminum takes up more space compared to gold. Therefore, a kilogram of aluminum will occupy more volume than a kilogram of gold due to the difference in their densities.
aluminum
The weight of 1 kilogram of feathers has the same weight as one kilogram of gold, because they both weigh the same. Now, they do not have the same volume at all, think about it, to make a kilogram of feathers you need a whole lot of them right? yes is the answer. Now try to picture one kilogram of gold... if you can't, just google it. So a kilogram of gold woudn't have the same volume as the feathers, and the feathers would have the most volume.
A kilogram of feathers and a kilogram of gold weigh the same—both are equal to one kilogram. The difference lies in their volume and density; feathers take up much more space than gold due to their lighter density. Thus, while they weigh the same, they have very different physical characteristics.
Weight-wise yes. But there is going to be a different volume due to density
Aluminum
ofcourse 25 kg of banana will have more volume
A kilogram of silver weighs more.
Foam has more volume per mass than gravel.
Butter has greater volume than lead because butter has more mass.
The more dense its one kilogram of silver and the more better in durability and color it's solid white gold!
One kilogram of gold and one kilogram of feathers both weigh the same, but they occupy different volumes. Gold is much denser than feathers, so 1 kilogram of gold will take up significantly less space than 1 kilogram of feathers. Therefore, the feathers will take up more space than the gold.