that depends, if its an Olympic bar it weighs 20kg
yes
No, 20kg of lead and 20kg of feathers would have the same mass in vacuum since both are 20kg. Gravity does not affect mass.
An object with a mass of 20 kg weighs about 196 Newtons (44 pounds) on earth.
To find the total weight of 50 tins of pears in kilograms, you would multiply the weight of one tin (400g) by the number of tins (50) and then convert the total weight to kilograms. So, the total weight of 50 tins of pears would be 20,000g or 20kg.
20kg is equal to 20,000g.
On Earth, 20kg is 196 newtons or 44.1 lbs.
No. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 newtons. On the Moon, the weight of each kilogram is about 1/6 of what it is on Earth.
This depends greatly on how dense the solid product is, since some solids have a greater amount of air-pockets than others. A 20kg solid with lots of air pockets (so not very dense) will lead to a smaller amount of liquid than a 20kg solid with very few air pockets (a dense solid).
10-20kg is equivalent to 22-44 pounds.
Well, if the full bucket weighs 50kg and the half-filled bucket weighs 30kg, that means the water in the bucket weighs 20kg. So, if we subtract the weight of the water (20kg) from the weight of the half-filled bucket (30kg), we get the weight of the empty bucket, which is 10kg. So, the weight of the empty bucket is 10kg.
you mean will it not squish under load? I would say so, it takes alot of force to squash a can (about 20kg+) and Im sure a block like this weighs alot less.