35 pounds on the Moon.
You would weigh way less on the moon. For example. If you weighed 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 16.6 pounds on the moon.
Someone who weighed 135 lbs. on earth would way about 22 lbs. on the moon. This is because the moon, being much smaller than earth, has about one sixth of the gravitational force that earth has.
Convert 7 kg to pounds, 7x2.22 = 15.54 Pounds you way 1/6 of your normal earth weight on the moon. So 15.54 pounds divided by 6 equals 2.59 Pounds.
The answer is that the two characteristics that affect gravity are mass and newtons. There is less gravity on the moon than on the earth. A space suit weighs 180 pounds on earth but on the moon it weighed way less than it was when it was on earth.
Your weight on the moon is about 16.55% of your weight on Earth. If you weigh 200 pounds on Earth, then you'll weigh 33.1 pounds on the moon. Plus, of course, your space suit and all the rest of the gear you have to wear in order to survive on the moon.
There are two reasons we way less on the moon; 1.)Since there is not much of an atmosphere up there, there are not hundreds of pounds pushing down on us. 2.)Another reason is since earth is bigger than the moon, Earth pulls us towards itself much more than a smaller object such as the moon would
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.
You would weigh 36 pounds on earth.
-- Your mass doesn't change. No matter where you go, mass is what you bring with you. -- If you take your mass to the Moon, it will weigh about 16.5% as much as it weighs on Earth. If you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 24 pounds 13.2 ounces on the moon. In between ... on the way there, comfy and coasting in your space capsule on the way from the Earth to the Moon, you would weigh zero, and you would float around in the space capsule. Unless you snugged a loop of your shoelace around a hook on the wall in order to get some sleep.
Our moon is the smallest.
When the Sun, Earth and Moon are lined up in such a way that the full moon moves into the Earth's shadow, it creates a lunar eclipse.
When the Sun, Earth and Moon are lined up in such a way that the full moon moves into the Earth's shadow, it creates a lunar eclipse.