Weight = mass times gravity. On Earth, use 9.82 (or round it to 9.8, or to 10) for gravity.
14 (kg) x 10 (Newton/kg) = 140 Newton.
A kilogram is a unit of mass, not weight. In Earth's standard gravity, a kilogram mass weighs about 9.8 Newtons.
1 cubic decimeter of pure water is 1 liter and weigh 1 kilogram. A mass of one kilogram is a weight of one kilogram at sea level. If you move your subject into space, it will weigh less. If you take it to Jupiter, it will weight more, but its mass will remain one kilogram.
Kg (kilogram) is the standard - although it is not a standard of weight, but of mass. The kilogram is used world-wide as the standard of mass. It is part of the SI (the International System of units).
It means that a 1 kilogram mass has a weight of 9.8 N, a two kilogram mass has a weight of 19.6, and so on
Yes, the word 'kilogram' is a noun, a word for a unit of mass or weight; a word for a thing.
Weight or mass.
No. Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight.
A kilogram (mass) on the moon is still a kilogram (mass)A kilogram (referred to as its weight) is about 1/6 of it's Earth weight or 160 g (approx)Aside: In common usage we talk about an object having a weight, not a mass (e.g. Your driver's license states your weight). In science a kilogram is a unit of mass. Weight is what we perceive when we try to lift that mass - it is the force of gravity pulling the kilogram mass to the Earth. It gets a bit confusing when you are at Earth's surface because a the kilogram mass has a numerically kilogram of force (usually referred to as weight) attracting it downwards.
1 kilogram is the mass of about 441dimes.
The SI unit of mass is the kilogram. Actually, while the SI unit of mass is the kilogram, mass and weight are different; weight is ALWAYS measured in NEWTONS (n)!
A kilogram is a unit of mass, not weight. In Earth's standard gravity, a kilogram mass weighs about 9.8 Newtons.
Mass. NOT weight.
No. Kilogram is a unit of mass only. Weight is measured in units of force; the SI unit for force is the Newton.
Not really.Somethings weight is a measure of the mass of the object in a gravity field. therefore an object of mass 1 Kilogram will weigh 1 kilogram on Earth but only 1/3 of a kilogram on the Moon.For this reason we say stars / planets/ moons etc have mass not weight as it is mass that is the invariant property of matter not weight.
1 cubic decimeter of pure water is 1 liter and weigh 1 kilogram. A mass of one kilogram is a weight of one kilogram at sea level. If you move your subject into space, it will weigh less. If you take it to Jupiter, it will weight more, but its mass will remain one kilogram.
Yes, if you mean kilometer not kilogram a kilogram is a unit of weight/mass
Weight is measured in kilograms. There are 1000 grams in 1 kilogram, and 1000 kilograms in 1 tonne.