On the moon, because of the mass difference between the moon and the Earth, it would weigh 1/6th of kilogram.
The answer is yes because one is twice the weight of the other and is made of exactly the same material. The answer would be "No" if the materials differed.
Due to atmospheric pressure the weight of 10 kg of cotton is grater than 10 kg of iron.
Not sure if this is a serious question but...A kilogram is a unit of mass, or in this case, weight.A kilogram is a kilogram.One kilogram of anything is a kilogram.1 kg of iron = 1 kg of wool.
They both weigh 1kg....... so they weigh the same,
1 kilogram is 1 kilogram no matter what the substance.
On Earth, a kilogram of any substance will always weight 9.8 newtons, no matter what material it is made of.
Both are equal Depends if they weigh 1 kilogram where they are or one kilogram compared to Earth's gravitational pull. ~The kilogram technically does not measure weight, it measures mass. If all the items you mention have the same mass then the densest material (iron) has the greatest weight because it displaces the least volume of air. A balloon filled with one kilogram (around 5600 liters) of helium will float in the air. If you want to measure weight, the proper unit is the Newton.
All kilograms have the same weight, as long as they're all on the same planet. (We don't know what that weight is until we know what planet they're on.)
16.3% of whatever it is on earth.
Iron has a greater density.
Earth's crust is made up of 5% (by weight) iron No. It's made out of pizzia.
(Diameter x Diameter) x 0.00623 = Kilogram per Running Meter
The answer is yes because one is twice the weight of the other and is made of exactly the same material. The answer would be "No" if the materials differed.
Because of it's weight
Due to atmospheric pressure the weight of 10 kg of cotton is grater than 10 kg of iron.
Not sure if this is a serious question but...A kilogram is a unit of mass, or in this case, weight.A kilogram is a kilogram.One kilogram of anything is a kilogram.1 kg of iron = 1 kg of wool.
The weight of 1 mm thick x 1000 mm x 1000 mm galvanized iron sheet is 7.85 kilogram. This is based on taking the density of the iron sheet to be 7850kg per cubic meter.