1 kilogram per liter
1000 kilogram per m3
1 gram per milliliter
8.34 lbs per gallon
How much and where is it?
The question as it is currently written shows a lack of understanding of weight, mass, and volume. One might the question with the question How much water? or How much water and on what planet? The real question here is instead what is the density of water, which is the mass of water per unit volume.
The weight of any object or substance depends upon how much matter there is and where it is because weight is a dependent on gravity. The weight of, say, a gallon of water on the surface of the Earth is greater than the same amount of water on the moon. Put another way, a quart of water on Earth might weigh as much as a gallon of water on the moon because there is much less gravity on the moon.
So, assuming you want to know how much a gallon of water weighs here on Earth, figure about 8.34 pounds. See the related questions for more s to your question.
The density is the mass of water divided by its volume. Since mass doesn't depend on gravity, the mass of an equal volume of water is the same everywhere. The density of water is 1 gram per milliliter (or equivalently 1 kilogram per liter). The density of water does depend on temperature however. The value of 1 kg/L is for water at 24 °C.
which water?
it is the same weigh.
To much.
78 pounds
a litre
50 oz of water would weigh approximately 3.13 pounds.
you can always filter out all the extra salt from the water and weigh it with normal water with nothing on it and see how much the salt water weigh by the normal water
They can weigh up to 200 pounds.
it depends on the size
They weigh the same
I gram
834