2 kg is more.
Yes, the 2-kg iron brick has more inertia than the 1-kg block of wood. Inertia is directly proportional to mass, so an object with more mass has more resistance to changes in its state of motion.
Cotton wool. 2kg of anything is more than 1kg of anything.
A kg is a unit of mass, not weight. On Earth, a kg of mass weighs 2.205 pounds. (rounded) But on the moon, the same kg weighs about 0.36 pound (5.8 ounces), and on Mars it weighs about 0.84 pound (13.4 ounces).
Not if they're in the same place, or simply on the same planet. But if the 1 kg is on the Earth and the 2 kg is on the moon, then the force of gravity on the 1 kg is 9.8 newtons (2.205 pounds), and the force of gravity on the 2 kg is only 3.2 newtons (0.730 pound). And if the 1 kg is on ANY planet, and the 2 kg is in space, then the force of gravity on the 1 kg is something, and the force of gravity on the 2 kg is approximately zero.
1 [N] = 1 [kg] * 1 [m/s2]. Answer: an acceleration of 1 [m/s2].
1/2 kg = 500 g
1/2 kg = .5 kg 7/8 kg = .875 kg 7/8 is larger than 1/2
Yes, the 2-kg iron brick has more inertia than the 1-kg block of wood. Inertia is directly proportional to mass, so an object with more mass has more resistance to changes in its state of motion.
Cotton wool. 2kg of anything is more than 1kg of anything.
40 kg
Convert to the same units then a comparison can be made: 1 tonne = 1000 kg → 2 tonne = 2 × 1000 kg = 2000 kg 2000 < 3000 → 2000 kg < 3000 kg → 2 tonnes < 3000 kg 3000 kg is larger than 2 tonnes.
1 + 2 + 4 = 7divide one kg by 7then multiple each item by that answer1 part cement is 1/7 of the kg (5.0428 ounces)2 part sand is 2/7 of the kg (10.0857 ounces)4 part stone is 4/7 of the kg (20.1714 ounces)kg equals 2.205 pounds, so you are not going to make very much concrete using only one kg!
A kg is a unit of mass, not weight. On Earth, a kg of mass weighs 2.205 pounds. (rounded) But on the moon, the same kg weighs about 0.36 pound (5.8 ounces), and on Mars it weighs about 0.84 pound (13.4 ounces).
To find how many kilograms is 1 1/2 kg greater than 350 g, first convert 350 g to kilograms: 350 g is 0.35 kg. Then add 1.5 kg to 0.35 kg: 1.5 kg + 0.35 kg = 1.85 kg. Therefore, 1 1/2 kg greater than 350 g is 1.85 kg.
1 kg plus 1 kg.
1/5 kg
Not if they're in the same place, or simply on the same planet. But if the 1 kg is on the Earth and the 2 kg is on the moon, then the force of gravity on the 1 kg is 9.8 newtons (2.205 pounds), and the force of gravity on the 2 kg is only 3.2 newtons (0.730 pound). And if the 1 kg is on ANY planet, and the 2 kg is in space, then the force of gravity on the 1 kg is something, and the force of gravity on the 2 kg is approximately zero.