Mass measured in kilograms is always the same.
True weight however is a force measured in Newtons not kg and this is the effect gravity has on a mass.
cantelope
Well, a kilogram weighs 2.2 pounds, so 5 kg would be something that weighs 11 pounds.
An egg weighs less than 1 kilogram - or an apple.
You don't "change" it. Mass is mass, and weight is weight.Mass HAS weight. How much weight it has depends on the gravity field it happens to be in.On the surface of the earth, 1 kilogram of mass weighs about 9.8 newtons (2.2 pounds). On the moon oron another planet, the same kilogram can weigh more, less, or the same. In an orbiting satellite, or in aspacecraft on its way to the moon or another planet, the same kilogram weighs zero, and it floats around.
The mass of an object that weighs 20,000 lbs on earth is 9,071.9 kg. (rounded)
All kilograms have the same weight, as long as they're all on the same planet. (We don't know what that weight is until we know what planet they're on.)
The amount of substance of a planet is measured in kilograms, a unit of mass. In this sense, there is no difference between one planet and another. It doesn't make much sense to speak about the "weight" of a planet, but you can measure the attraction between a planet and another object in units of force, i.e., in Newtons.
If an object weighs 130 lb on earth, then its mass is 58.97 kg. (rounded) If an object weighs 130 lb on the moon, then its mass is 361.2 kg. (rounded)
An object that weighs 150.4 pounds on earth is a 68.22 kg mass.
One kilogram weighs approximately 2.205 pounds on earth, 0.36 pounds on the moon, or 0.84 pounds on Mars. On the way from one of them to another, one kilogram weighs nothing.
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.
A gram weighs less than a kilogram.