No. You would would weigh only about 38% of your weight on Earth.
No. An object on Mars would weigh about 38% of what it does on Earth. The _mass_ would be the same, however, so you would be able to lift it easier, but pushing it and stopping it would be the same as on Earth.
No. Surface gravity on Mars is 37.6% (about 3/8) what it is on Earth.
You would weigh less on Mars compared to Earth due to Mars' lower gravity. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of the gravity on Earth, so a person weighing 100 pounds on Earth would weigh only 38 pounds on Mars.
Mars is a smaller planet than Earth. Your weight is the product of two masses yours and the planets Your mass stays the same wherever you are, if you stand on a smaller planet, you weigh less.
On Mars, gravity is about 38% of Earth's gravity. If you weigh 90 pounds on Earth, you would weigh around 34.2 pounds on Mars.
If you weigh 69 lb on Earth, you would weigh approximately 26.1 lb on Mars. This is because Mars has lower gravity (about 38% of Earth's gravity), so objects weigh less on Mars compared to Earth.
On Mars you weigh 30% of what you do on Earth. For example, if you weigh 122lbs on Earth, you would only weigh 46lbs on Mars.
On Mars, you weigh 37.7% as much as you would on Earth. If you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you weigh only 37.7 pounds on Mars. If you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you weigh only 56.6 pounds. The equation is .37 x Earth weight = Martian weight.
On Mars, you would weigh about 37.8% of your weight on Earth. So if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 38 pounds on Mars.
On Mars you would weigh pi pounds.
100 pounds on earth surface = 37.8 pounds on mars surface Mass remains the same though.
no, say if you weighed 1kg on earth than you would weigh 0.1 on the moon and 0.3 on mars