The mass of one liter of water is about one kilogram. It does not matter if you check it on the moon, on the Earth, or on Jupiter.
Weight, on the other hand, is different in those three places, but the question did not ask for weight, it asked for mass.
By definition, the mass of one litre of pure water at room temperature is one kilogramOne litre of water weighs in at 1 kg/ 2.2 lb.
One half liter of pure water weighs 500 grams.
A liter of water has approximately a mass of one kilogram.
In terms of mass yes as 1liter of water is equivilant to 1kg of water.This also applies to 1liter of honey which is also 1kg of honey. However in terms of density, no as honey is obviously more denser than water. If you want to prove this take a glass of cold water and a spoonfull of honey.Pour the honey and you will see the honey sinking.This proves that honey is denser than water.
A liter of water has a mass of about one kg.
One liter of standard pure clean water at standard temperature and pressure has a mass of 1 kg.
By definition, the mass of one litre of pure water at room temperature is one kilogramOne litre of water weighs in at 1 kg/ 2.2 lb.
The kilogram is a unit of mass. It is approximately equal to the mass of one liter of water.
One half liter of pure water weighs 500 grams.
A liter of water has approximately a mass of one kilogram.
Kilogram is mass. Liter is volume. The only way you can relate the two is if you have a substance of known density. For example, water has a density of 1 kg per liter.
1 kg does make up one liter of water
true
That depends on what the liter has in it. -- If the liter of space has air in it, there's roughly 0.0012 kilogram of mass there, but the exact number depends on the temperature and pressure. -- If the liter of space has water in it, there's roughly 1 kilogram of mass there. -- If the liter of space has gold, stones, or lead in it, there are several kilograms of mass there. -- If the liter of space is empty, there's no mass there at all. Units of mass (kilograms) are incompatible with units of volume (litres).
The answer would be 1 kg. If one milliliter of water weighs one gram, one liter of water weighs 1000 grams, which equals one kilogram.
Water because a liter is a measurement of space and not mass. Water occupying 1 liter of space is lots heavier than air occupying 1 liter of space. <><><><><> It depends on density. It is possible, given enough pressure, to have one liter of air weigh more than one liter of water.
The answer would be 1 kg. If one milliliter of water weighs one gram, one liter of water weighs 1000 grams, which equals one kilogram.