980 N
On earth, 100 kg of mass weighs 980 newtons (220.46 pounds).
1 kg
45 kg. The same. Your mass doesn't change on which planet you're on, but your weight does.
Weight = mg (mass x gravity).
You convert mass to weight by multiplying by the local acceleration due to gravity ...f = ma... where f is the force in newtons, mass is the mass in kilograms and a is the acceleration in meters per second squared. For the Earth, a is 9.81, so a mass of 100 kg has a weight of 981 newtons.It is "common" though erroneous to say that the "weight" of the 100 kg object is 100 kg. It is precisely correct to say the weight is 981 newtons, on the Earth, but we generally accept the implicit conversion for G=9.81 in the statement that the weight is 100 kg, just not on a physics test.
100 kg is called "one hundred kilograms". It is a unit of measurement used to quantify mass or weight.
1 kilogram weighs 2.20462 (rounded) on earth.100 kg weighs (100 x 2.20462) = 220.462 pounds
100 kg of mass weighs 220.46 pounds on earth, and 200.22pounds on Venus.
1,000 kg of mass weighs 9800 newtons on Earth, 1,620 newtons on the moon, and other, different weights in other, different places.
The force due to gravity on the moon is about 1/6th of that on Earth. Therefore, the weight of a 100 kg mass on the moon would be 100 kg * 9.81 m/s^2 / 6 ≈ 163.5 N.
Acceleration due to gravity on Jupiter is 24.79 m/sec2. Therefore, if the mass is 100 kg, you won't weight 900 Newton, you'll weigh 2479 Newton.
Weight is a measure of the gravitational pull for a mass , such that a mass of 1 Kg is having a weight of 10 Newton . So weight is a downward force measured in Newtons . Weight ( in N ) = Mass ( in Kg ) × Gravity ( usually 10N/Kg )