The conversion of liters to kilograms depends on the substance being measured, as the density of different materials varies. For water, which has a density of 1 kg/L, 90 liters would be equal to 90 kilograms.
1.25 liters of water has a mass of 1.25 kilograms.
The equivalence will depend on the substance. For water, 0.3 kilograms is equivalent to 0.3 liters, since the density of water is 1 kg/L. However, for other substances, you would need to know the density to convert between mass (kg) and volume (L).
The concentration of Clavamax is typically 62.5 mg/ml, which means 125 mg of Clavamax would be 2 ml.
Liters and kilograms measure two different quantities, volume and mass. The relationship that connects the two is density. D = m / V The liter was defined in terms of water, with 1 L of water being the quantity with a mass of 1 kg. It's why water has a density of 1 g / mL. But this only works for water. 1 kg of iron will not have a volume of 1 L
.125 L
The conversion of liters to kilograms depends on the substance being measured, as the density of different materials varies. For water, which has a density of 1 kg/L, 90 liters would be equal to 90 kilograms.
1,25 L = 1 250 mL
1.25 liters of water has a mass of 1.25 kilograms.
The equivalence will depend on the substance. For water, 0.3 kilograms is equivalent to 0.3 liters, since the density of water is 1 kg/L. However, for other substances, you would need to know the density to convert between mass (kg) and volume (L).
100. Pure water has a density of 1000Kg/M3, which is also 1kg/liter So 100Kgs = 100 l
That is 16 times.
Yes. 125 IS a decimal. You can also express 125 l as 125.0 l or 0.125 kl
A kilogram is a measure of mass. A litre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and it is not sensible to even consider converting from one to the other. If you are not convinced, consider a litre of air. How many kilograms? Next consider a litre of water. How many kilograms?
It depends on the density of the liquid. If the 125 liters of liquid that you are weighing is distilled water at room temperature, the answer is 125,000 grams (or 125 kilograms) because cold water has a density of 1 kg/l. If you are weighing a denser liquid (e.g., salt water or very cold water or maple syrup), the answer would be greater than 125,000 grams; just so, if you are weighing a liquid less dense than water (e.g., very hot water or salad oil), the answer would be less than 125,000 grams. In general, density is given in grams/milliliter (1/1000th of a liter). Multiply the volume by the density using consistent units. So: 125 liters x 1 gram/milliliter x 1000 milliliters/liter = 125000 grams or 125 kg.
No, litres is a unit of volume and kilograms is a unit of mass. These are not comparable unless you know the density of the material you are measuring. Water has an approximate density of 1 kg/L, so 300 L of water is approximately 300 kg.
8 times.