Because F=mg -> m=F/g
On earth g=10 m/sec2 so m1=30/10=3 kg
On the Moon g=0.16 m/sec2 so m2=30/0.16=180 kg
m2
The same object will have a weight of 181.5kg or about 1780N on Earth.
The force of gravity on the moon is 6.05 times less than on Earth. Therefore, divide mass on Earth by 6.05: 30kg = 30 / 6.05 = about 5kg (4.958).
30 Newtons has greater mass on the moon. 30 Newtons on earth equates to 3.06 kilograms. The same force of 30 Newtons on the surface of the moon equates to 18.52 kilograms.
the second object on the moon
5
About 30.5 pounds
To find your weight on the Moon, we have to divide 9.8 (gravity on the Earth) by 6. That answer has to be multiplied by 85 pounds. that answer is done in newtons as you are finding the weight on the moon. newtons is unit for weight.
50 newtons
A 10-kg mass would weigh 98 newtons (22.05 pounds) on earth, and 16 newtons (3.6 pounds) on the moon.
on the moon it will weigh roughly 1/6 the amount of newtons as it does on earth. So 16.7 on earth would be about 2.8 newtons on the moon.
Depends where you weigh it. This is really pedantic but weight is a force acting on an object due to gravity, not an inherent characteristic of the object. The Earth has a mass of 6.0x1024 kg. If you weighed it on the Earth (?) it would weigh 6.0x1025 Newtons but on the moon just 7.21023 N.
If you weighed 100lb on Pluto you would weigh approximately 1,493lb on Earth.
about 9 pounds
Near Earth's surface, it would weigh about 98 newton.Weight = mass x gravity And, close to Earth, the gravitational field ("gravity") is about 9.8 newton/kilogram.
About 30.5 pounds
An object with a mass of 20 kg weighs about 196 Newtons (44 pounds) on earth.
To find your weight on the Moon, we have to divide 9.8 (gravity on the Earth) by 6. That answer has to be multiplied by 85 pounds. that answer is done in newtons as you are finding the weight on the moon. newtons is unit for weight.
50 newtons
If you weighed 30lb on Earth you would weigh a mere 2lb.
The weight of an object is the force it exerts due to its mass and gravitational pull. On earth, a 1 kg object would 'weigh' 9.8 Newtons.
Your mass (kilograms) would stay the same as it never changes. But if you are talking about weight (newtons) it would depend on what you were comparing it to. If you have a weight of 300 newtons on earth then you would weigh 49.8 newtons on the moon therefore you would have lost weight. Whereas if you weighed 20.1 Newtons on Pluto you would weigh 49.8 newtons on the moon, loosing weight.
A 10-kg mass would weigh 98 newtons (22.05 pounds) on earth, and 16 newtons (3.6 pounds) on the moon.