This depends on the size and type of electrode. By experience, for a 1/8 in ordinary
mild steel electrode, there are 32 pieces in one kilogram.
A pencil, a piece of paper, and a scientific calculator all have a mass less than one kilogram.
A kilogram and a kilogram are the same unit. Therefore, one kilogram is equal to one kilogram.
1 kilogram is approximately 0.16 stone.
About 2.2 pounds in one kilogram.
1.2viss
1 kilogram, one gram would be about a piece of paper
Exactly one kilogram is in a kilogram.
A pencil, a piece of paper, and a scientific calculator all have a mass less than one kilogram.
1,000,000,000,000 nanograms are in one kilogram.
There are 1000 grams in one kilogram.
One kilogram is 32.15 troy ounces.
1000 grams is a kilogram.
One kilogram is about 2.205 pounds.
1,000,000,000
Often electrochemical studies are interested in one of the electrodes of the cell only. The second electrode is present to complete the cell. Electrode of interest is named working electrode or the indicator electrode; the second electrode is know as reference electrode or auxiliary electrode (counter electrode).
It depends how large the cotton candy is, but it takes a huge piece of cotton candy to weigh even one kilogram.
There are one thousand centimeters in one kilogram. (I had to look it up on Google!)