Slug to Kilogram Converter
Convert slugs to kilograms with our free online weight converter.
Quick Answer
1 Slug = 14.5939 kilograms
Formula: Slug × conversion factor = Kilogram
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
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Slug to Kilogram Calculator
How to Use the Slug to Kilogram Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Slug).
- The converted value in Kilogram will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Weight category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Slug to Kilogram: Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Slug to Kilogram involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Slug = 14.5939 kilogramsExample Calculation:
Convert 5 slugs: 5 × 14.5939 = 72.9695 kilograms
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.
Need to convert to other weight units?
View all Weight conversions →What is a Slug and a Kilogram?
What Is a Slug?
The slug (symbol: sl or slug) is a unit of mass in the Foot-Pound-Second (FPS) system of imperial units. It is defined through Newton's second law of motion (F = ma):
1 slug = 1 lbf / (1 ft/s²)
In words: one slug is the mass that accelerates at one foot per second squared when a force of one pound-force is applied to it.
Exact Value
1 slug = 32.17404855... pounds-mass (lbm) ≈ 32.174 lbm
1 slug = 14.593902937206... kilograms ≈ 14.5939 kg
These values derive from the standard acceleration due to gravity: g = 32.174 ft/s² = 9.80665 m/s².
The Pound Confusion
The imperial system has a fundamental ambiguity: the word "pound" means two different things:
Pound-mass (lbm):
- A unit of mass (quantity of matter)
- An object has the same pound-mass everywhere in the universe
- Symbol: lbm
Pound-force (lbf):
- A unit of force (weight)
- The force exerted by one pound-mass under standard Earth gravity
- Symbol: lbf
- 1 lbf = 1 lbm × 32.174 ft/s² (weight = mass × gravity)
This creates confusion because in everyday language, "pound" can mean either, depending on context. The slug eliminates this ambiguity by serving as an unambiguous mass unit compatible with pound-force.
Why the Slug Matters: Making F = ma Work
Newton's second law: F = ma (Force = mass × acceleration)
Problem with pounds-mass and pounds-force: If you use lbm for mass and lbf for force, Newton's law becomes: F = ma / g_c
where g_c = 32.174 lbm·ft/(lbf·s²) is a dimensional conversion constant—ugly and error-prone!
Solution with slugs: Using slugs for mass and lbf for force, Newton's law works cleanly: F = ma (no extra constants needed!)
Example:
- Force: 10 lbf
- Acceleration: 5 ft/s²
- Mass: F/a = 10 lbf / 5 ft/s² = 2 slugs
- (Or in lbm: mass = 2 slugs × 32.174 = 64.348 lbm)
FPS System
The slug is part of the Foot-Pound-Second (FPS) system, also called the British Gravitational System or English Engineering System:
- Length: foot (ft)
- Force: pound-force (lbf)
- Time: second (s)
- Mass: slug (sl)
- Acceleration: feet per second squared (ft/s²)
This contrasts with the SI system (meter, kilogram, second, newton) and the pound-mass system (foot, pound-mass, second, poundal).
The kilogram (symbol: kg) is the base unit of mass in the International System of Units (SI). It is one of the seven SI base units and forms the foundation for measuring mass and weight in the metric system.
Modern Definition (2019): The kilogram is defined by fixing the numerical value of the Planck constant (h) to be exactly 6.62607015×10⁻³⁴ joule-seconds (J⋅s). This definition, adopted on May 20, 2019 (World Metrology Day), replaced the previous definition based on a physical artifact.
Key relationships:
- 1 kilogram = 1,000 grams (g)
- 1 kilogram = 1,000,000 milligrams (mg)
- 1 kilogram = 0.001 metric tons (tonnes)
- 1,000 kilograms = 1 metric ton
In terms of imperial/US customary units:
- 1 kilogram ≈ 2.20462 pounds (lb) - Convert kg to lb
- 1 kilogram ≈ 35.274 ounces (oz) - Convert kg to oz
- 1 kilogram ≈ 0.157 stones (st) - Convert kg to stones
Visual perspective (how heavy is it?):
- 1 kg ≈ Liter bottle of water
- 1 kg ≈ Small laptop or tablet
- 1 kg ≈ Bag of sugar
- 1 kg ≈ Two pineapples
- 5 kg ≈ Newborn baby
- 10 kg ≈ Small dog or cat
Important distinction: While "mass" and "weight" are scientifically different (mass is the amount of matter, weight is gravitational force), in everyday usage, kilograms measure what we commonly call "weight."
Convert between weight units: kilogram converter
Note: The Slug is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Kilogram belongs to the metric (SI) system.
History of the Slug and Kilogram
The Imperial Weight-Mass Problem (Pre-1900)
Before the slug was invented, the imperial system created confusion between weight (force due to gravity) and mass (quantity of matter):
Common usage: "Pound" meant weight (what a scale measures on Earth)
- "This weighs 10 pounds" meant 10 pounds-force (10 lbf)
Scientific usage: "Pound" could mean mass (quantity of matter)
- "This has 10 pounds of mass" meant 10 pounds-mass (10 lbm)
The problem: Newton's laws of motion require distinguishing force from mass. Using "pound" for both led to:
- Confusion in physics calculations
- Need for awkward gravitational conversion constants
- Errors in engineering (mixing lbf and lbm)
Arthur Mason Worthington (1852-1916)
Arthur Mason Worthington was a British physicist and professor at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, known for his pioneering work in:
- High-speed photography of liquid drops and splashes
- Physics education and textbook writing
- Developing clearer terminology for imperial units
Around 1900, Worthington recognized that the imperial system needed a mass unit analogous to the kilogram—a unit that would make Newton's second law (F = ma) work without conversion factors.
The Slug's Introduction (c. 1900-1920)
Worthington proposed the slug as a solution:
The name: "Slug" evokes sluggishness—the tendency of massive objects to resist acceleration (inertia). A more massive object is more "sluggish" in responding to forces.
The definition: 1 slug = mass that accelerates at 1 ft/s² under 1 lbf
The relationship: 1 slug = 32.174 lbm (approximately)
This ratio (32.174) is not arbitrary—it equals the standard acceleration due to gravity in ft/s² (g = 32.174 ft/s²). This means:
- On Earth's surface, a 1-slug mass weighs 32.174 lbf
- On Earth's surface, a 1-lbm mass weighs 1 lbf
Adoption in Engineering Education (1920s-1940s)
The slug gained acceptance in American and British engineering textbooks during the early 20th century:
Advantages recognized:
- Simplified dynamics calculations (F = ma without g_c)
- Clearer distinction between force and mass
- Consistency with scientific notation (separating weight from mass)
Textbook adoption: Engineering mechanics books by authors like Beer & Johnston, Meriam & Kraige, and Hibbeler introduced the slug to generations of engineering students
University courses: American aerospace and mechanical engineering programs taught dynamics using the FPS system with slugs
Aerospace Era Embrace (1940s-1970s)
The slug became essential in American aerospace during the mid-20th century:
NACA/NASA adoption (1940s-1970s):
- Aircraft performance calculations used slugs for mass
- Rocket dynamics required precise force-mass-acceleration relationships
- Apollo program documentation used slugs extensively
Military ballistics:
- Artillery trajectory calculations
- Rocket and missile design
- Aircraft carrier catapult systems
Engineering standards:
- ASME and SAE specifications sometimes used slugs
- Aerospace contractor documentation (Boeing, Lockheed, etc.)
Decline with Metrication (1960s-Present)
Despite its technical superiority, the slug declined for several reasons:
International metrication (1960s onward):
- Most countries adopted SI units (kilogram for mass, newton for force)
- International aerospace and scientific collaboration required metric
- Slug never gained traction outside English-speaking countries
Everyday unfamiliarity:
- People use pounds (lbm/lbf) in daily life, not slugs
- No one says "I weigh 5 slugs" (they say "160 pounds")
- Slug remained a technical unit, never entering popular vocabulary
Educational shifts:
- Even American universities increasingly teach SI units first
- Engineering courses present slugs as "alternative" or "legacy" units
Software standardization:
- Modern engineering software defaults to SI (kg, N, m)
- Maintaining slug support became maintenance burden
Where Slugs Survive Today
The slug persists in specific technical niches:
American aerospace engineering:
- Aircraft weight and balance calculations (sometimes)
- Rocket propulsion dynamics
- Legacy documentation from NASA programs
Mechanical engineering dynamics courses:
- Teaching Newton's laws in FPS units
- Demonstrating unit system consistency
Ballistics and defense:
- Military projectile calculations
- Explosive dynamics
Historical technical documentation:
- 20th-century engineering reports and specifications
- Understanding legacy systems and equipment
-
French Revolution Origins (1795): During the development of the metric system, French scientists defined the "grave" (later renamed kilogram) as the mass of one cubic decimeter (liter) of pure water at 4°C (its maximum density). This provided a definition based on nature rather than arbitrary standards.
-
Kilogram des Archives (1799): The first physical standard was created - a platinum cylinder kept in the French National Archives in Paris. This "Kilogram of the Archives" served as France's official kilogram standard.
-
Treaty of the Metre (1875): Seventeen nations signed this international treaty, establishing global cooperation on measurement standards. This set the stage for creating an international kilogram prototype.
-
International Prototype Kilogram - Le Grand K (1889): A precisely machined platinum-iridium (90% platinum, 10% iridium) cylinder was created and designated as the international standard. This cylinder, known as "Le Grand K" or the IPK, was:
- 39 millimeters in both height and diameter
- Stored under three nested bell jars at the BIPM in Sèvres, France
- The only SI unit still defined by a physical artifact (until 2019)
- Accessed only rarely for calibration purposes
-
The Problem with Le Grand K: Over time, scientists discovered that the IPK's mass was changing relative to its copies - by approximately 50 micrograms over a century. This was problematic because:
- The kilogram was drifting from its official definition
- No way to verify if the prototype was gaining or losing mass
- Physical objects can be damaged, contaminated, or lost
- Limited access meant difficult calibrations worldwide
-
Search for a New Definition (1990s-2010s): Scientists developed two approaches:
- Kibble Balance (formerly watt balance): Relates mass to electromagnetic force and the Planck constant
- Avogadro Project: Count atoms in a silicon sphere to define the kilogram
-
2019 Redefinition: On May 20, 2019 (World Metrology Day), the kilogram definition changed:
- Old: Mass of the International Prototype Kilogram
- New: Defined by fixing the Planck constant at exactly 6.62607015×10⁻³⁴ J⋅s
- This allows any properly equipped laboratory to reproduce the kilogram
- No longer depends on a physical object that could change or be damaged
-
Why the Planck Constant?: This quantum mechanical constant relates energy to frequency and appears in fundamental physics equations. By fixing its value, mass can be measured using electromagnetic force through a Kibble balance.
-
Global Impact: The kilogram is used by virtually every country worldwide. Even the United States, which uses pounds in daily life, uses kilograms extensively in:
- Scientific research
- International trade
- Medical dosing
- Manufacturing
- Athletics and sports
-
Historical Significance: The 2019 redefinition was the culmination of over a century of metrological advancement, representing humanity's shift from physical artifacts to universal physical constants.
Common Uses and Applications: slugs vs kilograms
Explore the typical applications for both Slug (imperial/US) and Kilogram (metric) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for slugs
1. Aerospace Engineering and Aircraft Dynamics
Aerospace engineers use slugs when working in imperial units for aircraft and spacecraft calculations:
Aircraft weight and balance:
- Empty weight: 100,000 lbs = 3,108 slugs
- Loaded weight: 175,000 lbs = 5,440 slugs
- Center of gravity calculations using slugs for mass distribution
Rocket dynamics (Newton's F = ma):
- Thrust: 750,000 lbf
- Mass: 50,000 slugs (initial), decreasing as fuel burns
- Acceleration: F/m = 750,000 lbf / 50,000 slugs = 15 ft/s²
Orbital mechanics:
- Satellite mass in slugs
- Thrust-to-weight calculations
- Momentum and angular momentum in slug·ft/s units
2. Mechanical Engineering Dynamics
Engineering students and professionals analyze motion using slugs:
Newton's second law problems:
- Force: 50 lbf
- Acceleration: 10 ft/s²
- Mass: F/a = 50/10 = 5 slugs (no gravitational constant needed!)
Momentum calculations (p = mv):
- Car mass: 77.7 slugs (2,500 lbs)
- Velocity: 60 ft/s
- Momentum: p = 77.7 × 60 = 4,662 slug·ft/s
Rotational dynamics (moment of inertia):
- I = mr² (with mass in slugs, radius in feet)
- Flywheel: mass = 10 slugs, radius = 2 ft
- I = 10 × 2² = 40 slug·ft²
3. Ballistics and Projectile Motion
Military and firearms engineers use slugs for projectile calculations:
Artillery shell trajectory:
- Shell mass: 0.932 slugs (30 lbs)
- Muzzle force: 50,000 lbf
- Acceleration: a = F/m = 50,000/0.932 = 53,648 ft/s²
Bullet dynamics:
- Bullet mass: 0.000466 slug (150 grains = 0.0214 lbm)
- Chamber pressure force: 0.5 lbf (approximate average)
- Barrel acceleration calculation
Recoil analysis:
- Conservation of momentum (m_gun × v_gun = m_bullet × v_bullet)
- Gun mass: 6.22 slugs (200 lbs)
- Calculating recoil velocity in ft/s
4. Physics Education and Problem Sets
High school and college physics courses teaching imperial units:
Demonstrating unit consistency:
- Showing that F = ma works directly with slugs
- Contrasting with the g_c requirement when using lbm
Inclined plane problems:
- Block mass: 2 slugs
- Angle: 30°
- Friction force calculations in lbf
Atwood machine:
- Two masses in slugs
- Pulley system acceleration
- Tension forces in lbf
5. Automotive Engineering
Vehicle dynamics calculations using imperial units:
Braking force analysis:
- Car mass: 93.2 slugs (3,000 lbs)
- Deceleration: 20 ft/s² (emergency braking)
- Required braking force: F = ma = 93.2 × 20 = 1,864 lbf
Acceleration performance:
- Engine force (at wheels): 3,000 lbf
- Car mass: 77.7 slugs (2,500 lbs)
- Acceleration: a = F/m = 3,000/77.7 = 38.6 ft/s²
Suspension design:
- Spring force (F = kx) in lbf
- Sprung mass in slugs
- Natural frequency calculations
6. Structural Dynamics and Vibration
Engineers analyzing oscillating systems in imperial units:
Simple harmonic motion:
- F = -kx (Hooke's law, force in lbf)
- m = mass in slugs
- Natural frequency: ω = √(k/m) where m is in slugs
Seismic analysis:
- Building mass: distributed load in slugs per floor
- Earthquake force (F = ma) with acceleration in ft/s²
Mechanical vibrations:
- Damping force proportional to velocity
- Mass-spring-damper systems with m in slugs
7. Fluid Dynamics and Hydraulics
Flow and pressure calculations when using imperial units:
Momentum of flowing fluid:
- Mass flow rate: ṁ = ρAv (density in slug/ft³, area in ft², velocity in ft/s)
- Force on pipe bend: F = ṁΔv (in lbf)
Pipe flow:
- Water density: 1.938 slug/ft³ (at 68°F)
- Pressure drop calculations
- Pump power requirements
Aerodynamic forces:
- Drag force (lbf) = ½ ρ v² A C_D
- Air density: 0.00238 slug/ft³ (sea level, standard conditions)
When to Use kilograms
The kilogram is the universal standard for mass measurement across virtually all applications worldwide:
Science and Research
The fundamental unit for mass in all scientific disciplines. Essential for chemistry, physics, biology, medicine, and engineering research conducted globally.
Scientific Applications:
- Chemistry: Measuring reactants, products, and samples
- Physics: Mass calculations in mechanics and dynamics
- Biology: Specimen weights, culture media
- Medicine: Drug dosing, patient measurements
- Materials science: Sample preparation and analysis
- Environmental science: Pollution measurements, soil samples
Why kilograms in science:
- SI base unit (international standard)
- Decimal-based for easy calculations
- Defined by fundamental constant (Planck constant)
- Required for publication in scientific journals
- Universal reproducibility in any laboratory
Convert for scientific work: kilograms to other units
Healthcare and Medicine
Standard for patient weight, drug dosing, and medical calculations in hospitals and clinics worldwide. Critical for accurate treatment.
Medical uses:
- Patient weight: Baseline health measurement
- Drug dosing: Many medications dosed per kg body weight
- Pediatric care: Growth charts in kg and cm
- BMI calculation: Weight (kg) ÷ height² (m)
- Fluid management: IV fluids calculated by body weight
- Nutritional assessment: Protein needs, calorie requirements
- Medical research: Study participant measurements
Dosing examples:
- Pediatric antibiotics: 10-15 mg per kg body weight
- Anesthesia: Calculated per kg
- Chemotherapy: Often dosed per kg or body surface area
- Emergency medications: Weight-based dosing critical
Why critical in medicine:
- Precision prevents overdosing or underdosing
- International medical protocols use kg
- Pediatric safety depends on accurate weights
- Research requires standardized measurements
Food Industry and Nutrition
Standard unit for food packaging, recipes, nutritional labels, and commercial food sales in metric countries and international trade.
Food industry uses:
- Packaging labels: "Net weight: 1 kg"
- Commercial sales: Produce sold per kg
- Nutritional information: Values per 100g or serving
- Recipe scaling: Professional cooking in kg
- Food safety: Portion control, serving sizes
- Import/export: International food trade
- Restaurant supplies: Ingredients ordered in kg
Retail examples:
- Fruits and vegetables: Priced per kg
- Meat and fish: Sold by kg or portion
- Bulk foods: Rice, flour, nuts sold in kg bags
- Deli counters: Sliced meats weighed in kg
Shipping and Logistics
International standard for package weight, freight calculations, and postal rates. Essential for global commerce and transportation.
Shipping applications:
- Package weight limits: Carriers specify max kg
- Freight charges: Calculated per kg or dimensional weight
- Postal rates: Tiered by kg (0-2 kg, 2-5 kg, etc.)
- Air cargo: Charged per kg
- Container shipping: Weight limits in kg
- Customs declarations: Product weights in kg
- Warehouse inventory: Stock measured in kg
Standard limits:
- Small parcel: Up to 2 kg
- Standard parcel: 2-20 kg
- Heavy parcel: 20-30 kg
- Freight: 30+ kg
Why kg in shipping:
- International standard (UPU uses kg)
- Simplifies cross-border shipping
- Aviation industry uses kg
- Maritime shipping uses metric tons (1,000 kg)
Athletics and Sports
Standard for athlete weight classes, equipment specifications, and performance measurements in international competition.
Weight classes (examples):
- Boxing: Flyweight (< 51 kg), Welterweight (< 69 kg), Heavyweight (> 91 kg)
- Wrestling: Multiple classes from 57 kg to 125 kg
- Weightlifting: Classes from 55 kg to 109+ kg
- MMA: Featherweight (66 kg), Middleweight (84 kg), etc.
- Rowing: Lightweight (< 72.5 kg men, < 59 kg women)
- Judo: Multiple classes from 60 kg to 100+ kg
Equipment standards:
- Shot put: 7.26 kg (men), 4 kg (women)
- Discus: 2 kg (men), 1 kg (women)
- Javelin: 800 g (men), 600 g (women)
- Hammer throw: 7.26 kg (men), 4 kg (women)
Performance metrics:
- Clean and jerk records (kg lifted)
- Total weight lifted in competitions
- Body composition tracking
Manufacturing and Industry
Critical for quality control, material specifications, and product development. Enables consistent production and international standards.
Manufacturing uses:
- Raw materials: Ordered and inventoried in kg
- Product specifications: Component weights in kg or grams
- Quality control: Weight tolerance checking
- Batch production: Recipe scaling by kg
- Packaging: Box and pallet weights
- Shipping calculations: Product + packaging weight
- Waste management: Scrap material measured in kg
Industries:
- Automotive: Vehicle weight specifications
- Aerospace: Critical weight calculations
- Pharmaceuticals: Active ingredient quantities
- Chemicals: Formulation by weight
- Textiles: Fabric weight per square meter (GSM)
Agriculture and Farming
Standard for crop yields, animal weights, feed quantities, and agricultural commodities worldwide.
Agricultural uses:
- Crop yields: Tons per hectare (1,000 kg = 1 ton)
- Livestock weights: Animal growth tracking
- Feed calculations: Feed ratios per kg body weight
- Fertilizer application: kg per hectare
- Produce sales: Market prices per kg
- Seed quantities: Planting rates in kg/hectare
- Harvest records: Total yield in kg or tons
Example yields:
- Wheat: 3,000-8,000 kg/hectare
- Corn: 5,000-12,000 kg/hectare
- Rice: 4,000-10,000 kg/hectare
Everyday Life (Metric Countries)
Daily measurements for body weight, shopping, cooking, and general household use in 95% of the world's countries.
Personal use:
- Body weight tracking (bathroom scale)
- Grocery shopping (price per kg)
- Cooking and baking (recipe measurements)
- Luggage weight (travel)
- Baby weight monitoring (growth charts)
- Fitness tracking (weight loss/gain goals)
- Pet weight (veterinary care)
Use our kilogram converter for everyday conversions.
Additional Unit Information
About Slug (sl)
How is the slug defined?
Answer: 1 slug = 1 lbf / (1 ft/s²) — the mass that accelerates at 1 ft/s² under 1 lbf
The slug is defined through Newton's second law (F = ma):
Rearranging: m = F/a
Definition: If a force of 1 pound-force produces an acceleration of 1 foot per second squared, the mass is 1 slug.
In equation form: 1 slug = 1 lbf / (1 ft/s²)
This makes Newton's law work cleanly: F (lbf) = m (slugs) × a (ft/s²)
Alternative definition (equivalent): 1 slug = 32.174 pounds-mass (lbm)
This number (32.174) comes from standard Earth gravity: g = 32.174 ft/s²
How many pounds-mass are in a slug?
Answer: 1 slug = 32.174 pounds-mass (lbm) exactly
This relationship derives from the gravitational constant:
Standard gravity: g = 32.17405 ft/s² (exactly, by definition)
Weight-mass relationship: Weight (lbf) = Mass (lbm) × g / g_c
where g_c = 32.174 lbm·ft/(lbf·s²) (dimensional conversion constant)
On Earth: A mass of 1 lbm experiences a weight of 1 lbf Therefore: A mass of 32.174 lbm experiences a weight of 32.174 lbf
But also: A mass of 1 slug experiences a weight of 32.174 lbf (by definition)
Conclusion: 1 slug = 32.174 lbm
Example:
- Person: 160 lbm
- In slugs: 160 ÷ 32.174 = 4.97 slugs
Why is the slug unit used?
Answer: To simplify F = ma calculations in imperial units by eliminating the need for gravitational conversion constants
The problem without slugs:
Using pounds-mass (lbm) and pounds-force (lbf) in Newton's law requires:
F = ma / g_c
where g_c = 32.174 lbm·ft/(lbf·s²)
This is awkward and error-prone!
The solution with slugs:
Using slugs for mass and lbf for force, Newton's law is simple:
F = ma (no conversion constant!)
Example comparison:
Force: 100 lbf Acceleration: 5 ft/s² Mass = ?
Without slugs (using lbm): m = F × g_c / a = 100 × 32.174 / 5 = 643.48 lbm
With slugs: m = F / a = 100 / 5 = 20 slugs
Much simpler! (Though 20 slugs = 643.48 lbm, same physical mass.)
How do I convert between slugs and kilograms?
Answer: 1 slug = 14.5939 kg (multiply slugs by 14.5939 to get kg)
Slugs to kilograms: kg = slugs × 14.5939
Examples:
- 1 slug = 14.5939 kg
- 5 slugs = 5 × 14.5939 = 72.97 kg
- 10 slugs = 10 × 14.5939 = 145.94 kg
Kilograms to slugs: slugs = kg ÷ 14.5939 (or kg × 0.0685218)
Examples:
- 10 kg = 10 ÷ 14.5939 = 0.685 slugs
- 70 kg = 70 ÷ 14.5939 = 4.80 slugs
- 100 kg = 100 ÷ 14.5939 = 6.85 slugs
Quick approximation:
- 1 slug ≈ 14.6 kg
- 1 kg ≈ 0.069 slugs (roughly 1/15th slug)
Why don't people use slugs in everyday life?
Answer: Slugs are awkward for everyday masses and unfamiliar to the general public
Practical reasons:
1. Unfamiliar numbers: Converting common weights to slugs produces strange values
- "I weigh 5.6 slugs" sounds odd compared to "180 pounds"
- A gallon of milk is "0.26 slugs" vs. "8.6 pounds"
2. No tradition: Unlike pounds (used for centuries in commerce), slugs were invented for technical calculations only
3. Pounds work fine for daily life: The lbf/lbm ambiguity doesn't matter when you're just measuring weight on a scale
4. Imperial persistence: Americans use pounds because of cultural tradition, not technical correctness
Technical fields use slugs precisely because they eliminate ambiguity in force-mass calculations, but this advantage is irrelevant for grocery shopping or body weight.
Cultural reality: People will continue saying "pounds" for everyday masses, while engineers quietly use slugs behind the scenes.
What's the difference between a slug and a pound?
Answer: Slug measures mass; pound can mean either mass (lbm) or force/weight (lbf)
Slug:
- Always a unit of mass
- 1 slug = 32.174 lbm = 14.5939 kg
- Measures quantity of matter (inertia)
- Used in F = ma calculations
Pound-mass (lbm):
- Unit of mass
- 1 lbm = 1/32.174 slug = 0.453592 kg
- Quantity of matter
Pound-force (lbf):
- Unit of force (weight)
- Force exerted by 1 lbm under standard Earth gravity
- 1 lbf = force needed to accelerate 1 slug at 1 ft/s²
Relationship on Earth:
- 1 slug has a mass of 32.174 lbm
- 1 slug weighs (exerts a force of) 32.174 lbf on Earth
- 1 lbm weighs 1 lbf on Earth
Key insight: The numerical coincidence (1 lbm weighs 1 lbf on Earth) obscures the fact that mass and force are different physical quantities. Slugs eliminate this confusion.
Is the slug still used in engineering?
Answer: Yes, but rarely—mainly in American aerospace and dynamics courses
Where slugs are still used:
1. Aerospace engineering:
- NASA and aerospace contractors for some calculations
- Aircraft dynamics and performance
- Rocket propulsion when working in imperial units
2. Engineering education:
- Mechanical engineering dynamics courses
- Teaching Newton's laws with imperial units
- Demonstrating unit consistency
3. Defense/ballistics:
- Military projectile calculations
- Weapons systems analysis
4. Legacy documentation:
- Understanding 20th-century engineering reports
- Maintaining older systems specified in FPS units
Where slugs are NOT used:
- International engineering (uses kilograms)
- Daily life (people use pounds)
- Most modern engineering software (defaults to SI units)
- Scientific research (exclusively metric)
Current status: Declining but not extinct; maintained for continuity with older American engineering systems
Can I weigh myself in slugs?
Answer: Technically yes, but practically no—scales measure force (weight), not mass
The technical issue:
Bathroom scales measure weight (force in lbf or kg-force), not mass:
- They use a spring that compresses under gravitational force
- The readout is calibrated to show "pounds" or "kilograms"
Converting scale reading to slugs:
If your scale says "160 pounds" (meaning 160 lbf weight):
- Your mass = 160 lbm / 32.174 = 4.97 slugs
Or if metric scale says "70 kg" (meaning 70 kg-force weight):
- Your mass = 70 kg / 14.5939 = 4.80 slugs
Why people don't do this:
- Unfamiliar: "I weigh 5 slugs" sounds strange
- Extra math: Requires division by 32.174
- No benefit: Pounds work fine for personal weight tracking
Correct statement: "My mass is 4.97 slugs" (not "I weigh 4.97 slugs"—weight is measured in lbf!)
How does the slug relate to Newton's second law?
Answer: The slug is defined to make F = ma work directly with pounds-force and ft/s²
Newton's second law: Force = mass × acceleration
In slug system (FPS units):
- Force in pound-force (lbf)
- Mass in slugs (sl)
- Acceleration in feet per second squared (ft/s²)
Result: F (lbf) = m (slugs) × a (ft/s²)
Example:
- Mass: 2 slugs
- Acceleration: 15 ft/s²
- Force: F = 2 × 15 = 30 lbf
Why this works: The slug is defined such that 1 lbf accelerates 1 slug at 1 ft/s²
Contrast with lbm system (more complicated): F (lbf) = m (lbm) × a (ft/s²) / g_c
where g_c = 32.174 lbm·ft/(lbf·s²)
Same example using lbm:
- Mass: 2 slugs = 64.348 lbm
- Acceleration: 15 ft/s²
- Force: F = 64.348 × 15 / 32.174 = 30 lbf (same result, more complex calculation)
The slug's purpose: Eliminate the g_c conversion factor!
What does "slug" mean and where does the name come from?
Answer: "Slug" evokes sluggishness or inertia—the resistance of mass to acceleration
Etymology:
The term was coined by British physicist Arthur Mason Worthington around 1900.
The metaphor:
- Sluggish = slow to respond, resistant to movement
- Inertia = the tendency of massive objects to resist acceleration
- A more massive object is more "sluggish"
The connection to physics:
Inertial mass is the property of matter that resists acceleration:
- Larger mass → greater "sluggishness" → harder to accelerate
- Smaller mass → less "sluggish" → easier to accelerate
Example:
- Push a shopping cart (low mass) → accelerates easily (not very sluggish)
- Push a truck (high mass in slugs) → accelerates slowly (very sluggish!)
Word choice reasoning: Worthington wanted a vivid, memorable term that conveyed the physical concept of inertia while fitting the imperial system of units (slug, pound, foot).
Alternative names considered: The unit could have been called "inertia pound" or "force-pound," but "slug" was catchier and emphasized the conceptual link to resistance to motion.
Why is 1 slug equal to 32.174 pounds-mass specifically?
Answer: Because 32.174 ft/s² is the standard acceleration due to Earth's gravity (g)
The relationship derives from weight-force:
Weight (lbf) = mass (lbm) × gravity (ft/s²) / g_c
where g_c = 32.174 lbm·ft/(lbf·s²) is the dimensional conversion constant
On Earth (g = 32.174 ft/s²):
- 1 lbm weighs: 1 lbm × 32.174 / 32.174 = 1 lbf
Also by definition:
- 1 slug weighs: 1 slug × 32.174 ft/s² = 32.174 lbf (from F = ma)
Combining these:
- If 1 lbm weighs 1 lbf, and 1 slug weighs 32.174 lbf...
- Then 1 slug must equal 32.174 lbm!
The number 32.174 is Earth's standard gravitational acceleration: g = 32.17405 ft/s² ≈ 32.174 ft/s²
Consequence: The slug naturally relates to pounds-mass through Earth's gravity, even though the slug is a mass unit (not dependent on gravity).
On other planets:
- Mass is still measured in slugs (unchanged)
- Weight changes (different g value)
- Example: 1 slug on Moon weighs only 5.32 lbf (not 32.174 lbf)
Will the slug eventually disappear?
Answer: Likely yes—it's declining rapidly as engineering shifts to SI units globally
Factors driving obsolescence:
1. International standardization:
- Global engineering collaborations require common units (SI/metric)
- Slug is unknown outside U.S./British contexts
2. Educational shifts:
- Even American universities teach SI units first
- Slugs relegated to "alternative units" or historical notes
3. Software migration:
- Modern CAD/simulation software defaults to metric (kg, N, m)
- Maintaining slug support is extra development cost
4. Generational change:
- Engineers trained in FPS/slug units are retiring
- New graduates work primarily in metric
5. Daily life disconnect:
- Slug never entered common vocabulary (unlike "pound")
- No cultural attachment to preserve it
Where it might persist longest:
- Legacy aerospace systems (maintaining old aircraft/rockets)
- Specialized defense applications
- Historical engineering documentation
- Educational examples showing unit system consistency
Likely outcome: Slug will become a "historical unit" known primarily to:
- Engineering historians
- Those maintaining 20th-century equipment
- Educators explaining evolution of unit systems
Similar to how poundals (another imperial force unit) are now essentially extinct despite once being scientifically "correct."
About Kilogram (kg)
How much is 1 kilogram visually?
One kilogram is about the weight of a liter bottle of water or a small laptop.
Visual comparisons:
- 1 liter of water: Exactly 1 kg (at 4°C)
- Bag of sugar: Typically 1 kg or 2 kg
- Small laptop: 1-1.5 kg
- Two pineapples: About 1 kg total
- Medium-sized book: Approximately 1 kg
- Loaf of bread: About 0.5-0.8 kg (1 kg for larger loaves)
Body reference:
- For most people, 1 kg is slightly heavier than can be easily held in one hand for extended periods
- About 2-3% of average adult body weight
To remember: Picture a standard milk or water bottle (1 liter) - that's 1 kilogram.
How many pounds are in a kilogram?
One kilogram equals approximately 2.20462 pounds, commonly rounded to 2.2 pounds.
Exact conversion: 1 kilogram = 2.204622622 pounds
Practical conversions:
- 1 kg ≈ 2.2 lb
- 5 kg ≈ 11 lb
- 10 kg ≈ 22 lb
- 50 kg ≈ 110 lb
- 70 kg ≈ 154 lb
- 100 kg ≈ 220 lb
Reverse conversion (pounds to kilograms):
- 1 pound = 0.453592 kg (about 0.45 kg)
- 10 pounds ≈ 4.5 kg
- 100 pounds ≈ 45.4 kg
- 150 pounds ≈ 68 kg
- 200 pounds ≈ 90.7 kg
Quick mental math:
- Multiply kg by 2 and add 10% for rough estimate
- Example: 50 kg × 2 = 100, + 10% = 110 lb
Use our kg to pounds converter for accurate conversions.
What is the difference between kilogram and gram?
Kilogram (kg) is 1,000 times larger than gram (g).
The relationship:
- 1 kilogram = 1,000 grams
- 1 gram = 0.001 kilograms (or 1/1,000 kg)
Conversion:
- To convert kg to g: multiply by 1,000
- To convert g to kg: divide by 1,000
When to use which:
Use grams (g) for:
- Small quantities (< 1 kg)
- Food ingredients (200g flour, 500g meat)
- Precious metals (gold, silver by the gram)
- Medications (pills in mg or g)
- Postal items under 1 kg
Use kilograms (kg) for:
- Body weight
- Larger food packages
- Most everyday objects
- Shipping packages
- Sports equipment
Examples:
- Smartphone: 200 grams = 0.2 kg
- Laptop: 1,500 grams = 1.5 kg
- Bag of rice: 5,000 grams = 5 kg
- Person: 70,000 grams = 70 kg
Convert: kg to grams | grams to kg
Is the kilogram used in the United States?
Yes and no - it depends on the context.
Where kilograms ARE used in the US:
- Science and research: All scientific work
- Medicine: Drug dosing, patient weights in hospitals
- Manufacturing: Especially export products
- Athletics: Olympic sports, international competition
- Import/export: International trade
- Automotive: Vehicle specifications (increasingly)
- Pharmaceuticals: All measurements
- Military: NATO standardization
Where kilograms are NOT commonly used:
- Grocery stores (pounds, not kg)
- Body weight (people say pounds)
- Cooking (recipes use cups, ounces)
- Bathroom scales (typically show pounds)
- Everyday conversation
- Food packaging (labeled in oz, lb)
The dual system:
- US products often show both: "1 lb (454g)" or "Net Wt 16 oz (1 lb) 453g"
- Scientific calculators and medical equipment use kg
- US is officially metric but hasn't converted fully
Fun fact: US currency is metric (100 cents = 1 dollar), but few Americans realize this!
How many grams are in a kilogram?
There are exactly 1,000 grams (g) in one kilogram.
Why 1,000?: The prefix "kilo-" means 1,000.
Conversion:
- 1 kilogram (kg) = 1,000 grams (g)
- To convert kg to g: multiply by 1,000
- To convert g to kg: divide by 1,000
Examples:
- 0.5 kg = 500 grams
- 1.5 kg = 1,500 grams
- 2.75 kg = 2,750 grams
- 5 kg = 5,000 grams
- 10 kg = 10,000 grams
Remember: Move the decimal point three places:
- Kg → g: Move right (1.5 kg = 1,500 g)
- G → kg: Move left (1,500 g = 1.5 kg)
Common weights:
- Smartphone: 150-250 g = 0.15-0.25 kg
- Bag of sugar: 1,000 g = 1 kg
- Newborn baby: 3,000-4,000 g = 3-4 kg
Use our kg to grams converter for instant conversions.
How is the kilogram defined today?
Current Definition (since May 20, 2019): The kilogram is defined by fixing the numerical value of the Planck constant at exactly 6.62607015×10⁻³⁴ joule-seconds (J⋅s).
What this means:
- No longer based on a physical object (the old platinum-iridium cylinder)
- Based on a fundamental constant of quantum mechanics
- Can be reproduced in any properly equipped laboratory worldwide
- Uses a device called a "Kibble balance" (formerly watt balance)
- Incredibly stable and will never change
Why this definition?:
- Universal: The Planck constant is the same everywhere in the universe
- Reproducible: Any lab with the right equipment can measure it
- Permanent: Physical objects degrade; constants don't
- Precise: More accurate than artifact-based definition
How it works: A Kibble balance measures mass by balancing it against electromagnetic force. By fixing the Planck constant, the electromagnetic force precisely defines mass.
Historical evolution:
- 1795: Mass of 1 liter of water
- 1889: Physical prototype (Le Grand K)
- 2019: Planck constant (current definition)
Why it matters: This was the last SI base unit to be redefined based on fundamental constants, completing the modernization of the metric system.
What does "kg" stand for?
"kg" is the symbol for kilogram.
Breaking it down:
- kilo-: Greek prefix meaning 1,000
- gram: Base unit of mass in the metric system
- kilogram: Literally "1,000 grams"
Symbol rules:
- Always lowercase "k" (not "Kg" or "KG")
- Lowercase "g"
- No period after "kg"
- Space between number and symbol: "5 kg" (not "5kg")
Other kilo- units:
- kilometer (km) = 1,000 meters
- kilowatt (kW) = 1,000 watts
- kilojoule (kJ) = 1,000 joules
- kilobyte (kB or KB) = 1,000 bytes
Interesting fact: The kilogram is unique among SI base units because it already contains a prefix ("kilo-"). The base unit is actually the gram, but kilogram is the official SI base unit for mass.
How do you convert kilograms to ounces?
To convert kilograms to ounces, multiply by approximately 35.274.
Conversion formula: ounces = kilograms × 35.274
Examples:
- 1 kg = 35.3 ounces
- 0.5 kg = 17.6 ounces
- 2 kg = 70.5 ounces
- 5 kg = 176.4 ounces
- 10 kg = 352.7 ounces
Reverse conversion (ounces to kilograms):
- 1 ounce = 0.0283495 kg (about 28.35 grams)
- 16 ounces (1 pound) = 0.4536 kg
- 32 ounces = 0.907 kg
- 100 ounces = 2.835 kg
Why 35.274?
- 1 kg = 2.20462 pounds
- 1 pound = 16 ounces
- 2.20462 × 16 = 35.274 ounces per kilogram
Quick mental math:
- 1 kg ≈ 35 oz (close enough for estimates)
- 0.5 kg ≈ 18 oz (just over 1 pound)
Use our kg to ounces converter for precise conversions.
What is 70 kg in pounds?
70 kilograms = 154.32 pounds (commonly rounded to 154 pounds).
Calculation: 70 kg × 2.20462 lb/kg = 154.32 lb
Context:
- Average adult: 70 kg is a typical weight for an average-height adult
- Healthy weight: For a 5'10" (178 cm) person, 70 kg is within healthy range
- Athletes: Many athletes in various sports weigh around 70 kg
Nearby conversions:
- 65 kg = 143 lb
- 70 kg = 154 lb
- 75 kg = 165 lb
- 80 kg = 176 lb
Body weight ranges (approximate):
- 50 kg = 110 lb (petite adult)
- 60 kg = 132 lb (average woman)
- 70 kg = 154 lb (average man)
- 80 kg = 176 lb (athletic/large build)
- 90 kg = 198 lb (large adult)
- 100 kg = 220 lb (very large adult)
Convert any weight: kg to pounds converter
How much does a kilogram weigh on Earth?
On Earth, 1 kilogram has a weight of approximately 9.8 newtons (N) at sea level.
Important distinction:
- Mass: 1 kilogram (constant everywhere)
- Weight: Force due to gravity = mass × gravitational acceleration
- On Earth: Weight (N) = 1 kg × 9.8 m/s² = 9.8 N
What this means:
- Your mass stays 1 kg everywhere
- Your weight changes based on gravitational strength
- On Earth, we feel this as "weight"
Weight on other celestial bodies (for 1 kg mass):
- Moon: 1.6 N (about 1/6 of Earth)
- Mars: 3.7 N (about 3/8 of Earth)
- Jupiter: 24.8 N (about 2.5× Earth)
- Sun: 274 N (about 28× Earth)
- International Space Station: ~8.7 N (microgravity, but not zero)
Why we say "weight in kilograms": In everyday language, "weight" means mass. Technically incorrect, but universally understood. Scientists use "mass in kilograms" and "weight in newtons" for precision.
Remember: Your bathroom scale measures mass (kg), not weight (newtons), but we casually call it "weight."
What is a metric ton vs kilogram?
Metric ton (also called tonne) = 1,000 kilograms.
The relationship:
- 1 metric ton = 1,000 kg
- 1 kilogram = 0.001 metric tons
Symbols:
- Metric ton: t or MT or tonne
- Kilogram: kg
When to use which:
Use kilograms (kg) for:
- Individual weights (< 1,000 kg)
- Body weight, packages, products
- Most everyday measurements
Use metric tons (tonnes) for:
- Heavy vehicles (cars, trucks)
- Industrial materials
- Bulk commodities
- Cargo shipping
- Agricultural yields
Examples:
- Small car: 1,000-1,500 kg = 1-1.5 metric tons
- Elephant: 5,000 kg = 5 metric tons
- Shipping container: 20,000-30,000 kg = 20-30 metric tons
- Wheat harvest: 100,000 kg = 100 metric tons
Confusion alert:
- Metric ton (1,000 kg) ≠ US ton (2,000 lb = 907 kg)
- Metric ton (1,000 kg) ≠ UK ton (2,240 lb = 1,016 kg)
- Always specify which ton!
Convert: kg to metric tons | metric tons to kg
Conversion Table: Slug to Kilogram
| Slug (sl) | Kilogram (kg) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 7.297 |
| 1 | 14.594 |
| 1.5 | 21.891 |
| 2 | 29.188 |
| 5 | 72.97 |
| 10 | 145.939 |
| 25 | 364.848 |
| 50 | 729.695 |
| 100 | 1,459.39 |
| 250 | 3,648.475 |
| 500 | 7,296.95 |
| 1,000 | 14,593.9 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Slug to Kilogram?
To convert Slug to Kilogram, enter the value in Slug in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our weight converter page to convert between other units in this category.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Slug to Kilogram?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Slug and Kilogram. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.
Can I convert Kilogram back to Slug?
Yes! You can easily convert Kilogram back to Slug by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Kilogram to Slug converter page. You can also explore other weight conversions on our category page.
Learn more →What are common uses for Slug and Kilogram?
Slug and Kilogram are both standard units used in weight measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our weight converter for more conversion options.
For more weight conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.
Helpful Conversion Guides
Learn more about unit conversion with our comprehensive guides:
📚 How to Convert Units
Step-by-step guide to unit conversion with practical examples.
🔢 Conversion Formulas
Essential formulas for weight and other conversions.
⚖️ Metric vs Imperial
Understand the differences between measurement systems.
⚠️ Common Mistakes
Learn about frequent errors and how to avoid them.
All Weight Conversions
Other Weight Units and Conversions
Explore other weight units and their conversion options:
- Gram (g) • Slug to Gram
- Milligram (mg) • Slug to Milligram
- Pound (lb) • Slug to Pound
- Ounce (oz) • Slug to Ounce
- Stone (st) • Slug to Stone
- Ton (metric) (t) • Slug to Ton (metric)
- Ton (US) (ton) • Slug to Ton (US)
- Ton (UK) (long ton) • Slug to Ton (UK)
- Microgram (µg) • Slug to Microgram
- Carat (ct) • Slug to Carat
Verified Against Authority Standards
All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.
National Institute of Standards and Technology — US standards for weight and mass measurements
International Organization for Standardization — International standard for mechanics quantities
Last verified: February 19, 2026