If you push down on the floor with a certain force, then - by Newton's Third Law - the floor will push up against you, with the same force. For instance, say you have a mass of 70 kg. In that case, your weight will be (roughly) 700 newton. If you stand on the floor, you will push down with a force of 700 N; and the floor will of course push back up, with the same force.
9.8 newtons on earth W= MxG(9.8)
This measurement is called weight. Weight is measured in Newtons (N). This is not the weight you refer to in general everyday life, what you are actually referring to is mass. Weight is the amount of force required to support an object against gravity.
Mass is the measure of the amount of matter in an object, weight is the product of the mass and the acceleration due to gravity, measured in Newtons.
More acceleration against the gravity like rocket does....
The force of gravity, or more precisely the gravitational field, is not measured in newtons - and it isn't really a force, because the amount of force depends on the mass. Wikipedia lists Venus' gravitational field as 8.87 m/s2; this is equivalent to 8.87 newton/kg.
It's just the measure of the amount of force that is applied to an object. Fnet = ma where m=mass and a=acceleration Fweight = acceleration due to gravity*mass
That depends on the amount of gravity, of course. Weight = mass x gravity. Near the Earth's surface, the value for gravity is approximately 9.8 (meters per square seconds).That depends on the amount of gravity, of course. Weight = mass x gravity. Near the Earth's surface, the value for gravity is approximately 9.8 (meters per square seconds).That depends on the amount of gravity, of course. Weight = mass x gravity. Near the Earth's surface, the value for gravity is approximately 9.8 (meters per square seconds).That depends on the amount of gravity, of course. Weight = mass x gravity. Near the Earth's surface, the value for gravity is approximately 9.8 (meters per square seconds).
To find the amount of gravitational force on an object you multiply the mass of the object(in kg) by the gravity(in m/s^2) of the planet. Your final units are in Newtons(N) or kg*m/s^2
The acceleration due to gravity (9.8 meters/sec.^2) * mass of object.
(Weight is measured in Newtons (not in Cabs) and it is dependant on the amount of gravity that was acting on Him.) I don't think anyone actually knows yet how much Jesus weighed.
The mutual gravitational force that attracts 1 kg of lead and the earth to each other is 9.8 newtons (2.205 pounds).
Answer: MASS~is the amount of matter an object possesses. It is measured in kg/g WEIGHT~is the amount of gravity an object possesses. It is measured in newtons (N) Answer: Mass can be understood by an object's inertia - roughly speaking, how much force it takes to speed it up or slow it down. On Earth, the two are proportional (the weight of an object in newtons is 9.8 times the mass in kilograms), but with more or less gravity - e.g., on the Moon - the same mass will have a different weight.