Kilo- is a prefix meaning 1,000. Kilo is often used as an informal abbreviation for one thousand grams (1 kg), but should not be used in scientific work where confusion in terms must be avoided.
They have no connection in a physical sense. The only connections I can think of are they are both metric, and they are both a thousand of some other measurement.
A decimetre and a kilometre are both metric units of measurement.
Yes, 'Kilo' and 'kg' refer to the same unit of measure; kilograms.
No. Kilometers measures distance while kilograms measures weight or mass.
A kilogram is a measure of weight. A kilometre is a measurement of length.
Kilogram and kilometre are no at all alike. Kilogram is a WEIGHT -ie How heavy something is.
Kilometre is a measure of LENGTH. ie how long is a road.
By unit of length and distance and conversion ,we can say that 1 km=1000 m
1 kilogram = 1000 grams 1 gram = 0.001 kilogram
A decigram is a 10th of a gram, a kilogram is 1000 grams.
One kilogram
That depends on the substance that the kilogram is made of. A kilogram of air has a large volume. A kilogram of water has a medium volume. A kilogram of lead or stones has a small volume.
They are both metric units, otherwise, they are not alike.
killometer
km
millimeter
killometer 2
miles
1000m in a km
They are both metric units; otherwise, they have nothing in common.
They are both 1,000 times their base, in this case a gram and a meter.
There are 1000 meters in a kilometer. "kilo" means 1000. Therefore 1000m = 1km
1 kilometer=1,000,000 millimeters
There are excatly 0.00001 dam in a km