On the moon, 10 kg of mass weighs 16.2 newtons (3.65 pounds). (rounded)
An object with 10kg of mass weighs 22.05 pounds on earth,
but it weighs only 3.6 pounds on the moon.
Use the formula: weight = mass x gravity. On the Moon, surface gravity at the equator (according to Wikipedia) is 1.622 m/s2.
A 10 kilogram object on our moon would have a weight of around 16 newtons. It would still have a mass of 10 kilograms.
10 kg on earth weighs about 98 newtons (22 pounds)
10 kg on the moon weighs about 16.3 newtons (3.7 pounds)
A 40kg object on Earth has a weight of 6.7kg or on the moon.
10 Kg of mass weighs 16.2 newtons (3.65 pounds) when it's on the moon,
and 98 newtons (22.05 pounds) when it's on the Earth.
A mass of 0.1 kg (100 grams) weighs 0.98 Newton (3.53 ounces) on Earth,
and 0.162 Newton (0.584 ounce) on the moon.
it will be 1/6 of it so approx. 1.6
98N,16.3N
If it weighs 98 newtons on Earth, then we know that its mass is about 10kg. If that figure is its weight somewhere else, then its mass is something else.
That depends on the gravity. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 Newton.
On earth, 10 kg of mass weighs 980 Newtons (22.05 pounds), regardless of what kind of object it is, or what's in the bag.
98 Newtons.
10 kilograms is the mass. To calculate the weight (in newtons), multiply the mass by 9.8.
If it weighs 98 newtons on Earth, then we know that its mass is about 10kg. If that figure is its weight somewhere else, then its mass is something else.
98.07 newtons (Force = mass x acceleration)
That depends on the gravity. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 Newton.
98.07 newtons (Force = mass x acceleration)
2000k
On earth, 10 kg of mass weighs 980 Newtons (22.05 pounds), regardless of what kind of object it is, or what's in the bag.
That would depend on the volume (density) of the 10kg object.
98 Newtons.
10kg equals 100N On Earth, weight is mass multiplied by 10. So If I was 45kg, I would be 450N. Weight changes according to gravity, so on other planets you would weigh differently, but still have the same 10kg mass. Hope that this helped. ^Wrong. You multiply by 9.8 not 10. This is because of gravity on earth.
On earth, 10 kg of mass weighs roughly 98 newtons.