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2006-10-17 07:15:34 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Engineering

7 answers

First of all, as Kg is a mass measurement and a litre is a volume there can be no straight conversion factor as various materials have differing densities.

You would need to know the Specific Density of the material. The SG is a ratio (usually expressed as decimal) which compares the density of any material with that of water. Water is given the SG of 1.00 so that a piece of lead would have an SG of greater than 1.00 and most woods an SG of less than 1.00

One constant is that of liquid water where 1Kg = 1Ltr so if that's your problem, then it is a straight 1:1 conversion

2006-10-17 09:33:57 · answer #1 · answered by ? 2 · 3 0

Probably you are talking about water which (at a certain temperature) weights One kg per liter. So you could either use kg's or liters in this instance.

However for liquids that have different densities, this would differ. kg 's basically measure mass and liters measure volume. the relation ship is:

density = mass / volume.

to convert from kgs to liters you would therefore use
volume = mass / density. (you should know the density of the liquid).

There is also a measure called the specific gravity (SG) which gives how dense an object is in relation to water's density. How that can be used has been discussed in a previous answer.

Hope this helps.

2006-10-17 17:17:50 · answer #2 · answered by blind_chameleon 5 · 0 0

at first you're able to be able to desire to appreciate if your gallons are US gallons or imperial gallons. You did no longer specify, yet i'm going to wager they're imperial gallons as they're extra time-honored. as a result, a million gallon = 4.fifty 5 liters = 4.fifty 5 kg as a results of fact the SG of water is a million. Then divide by way of 60 to transform minutes to seconds and you have have been given 0.076. comparable conversion procedure while you're making use of US gallons.

2016-12-08 16:17:00 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

kg/s in to liters/s, could you be more specific?
all the liqids have diifrent density.
like 1m cube of water weighs 1000 kg.
and so the other liquids have diffrent density.
i m not satisfied of my own answer, could you be more specific ?

2006-10-17 09:25:46 · answer #4 · answered by king style 2 · 0 0

VOLUME=MASS/DENSITY

CUBIC METERS=KGS/(KG/CUBIC METER)

iF YOU DIVIDE MASS I.E. KG/S BY DENSITY, I.E. (KG/CUBIC METER), YOU WILL GET VOLUME IN CUBIC METERS.
IN ORDER TO CONVERT VOLUME FROM CUBIC METERS TO LITRES, DIVIDE THE VOLUME WITH 1000.
VOLUME IN CUBIC METERS/1000=VOLUME IN LITRES.

2006-10-17 09:37:07 · answer #5 · answered by sk 2 · 0 0

first you must know the density of your measured material
d=wt/v,, v=wt/d ,,wt=dv
if you have 1kg of dis.water that equal about 1liter

2006-10-17 11:25:19 · answer #6 · answered by source_of_love_69 3 · 0 0

You don't. One is mass (or weight), one is volume

2006-10-21 05:47:48 · answer #7 · answered by Snowlizard 3 · 0 1

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