Weight is a measurement of the pull of gravity on something. I would weigh differently on Jupiter than I would on Earth, so what I think you are referring to is mass. The moon's mass is approximately 7.36 X 10^32 kilograms, or about 8.11301125 × 10^19 short tons. This is the same as saying it is 81,100,000,000,000,000,000 tons. If you think that is large, consider that the Earth is 81 times heavier! Click the link below :-)
With its smaller mass, the Moon exerts only about 1/6 the gravity as the Earth, so objects would weigh just one-sixth of their Earth weight on the lunar surface. This is why the astronauts were able to float up off the surface as they walked there, even in their heavy spacesuits.
No, essentially mass = gravity the earths mass is roughly 81 * that of the moon, if you stood at the same distance from both, the force on you from the earth would be 81 * that of the moon.
If he weighs 80 pounds on the earth, then he would weigh about 13.1 pounds on the moon.That's not counting his space-suit, helmet, oxygen tank, radio, heater, lead boots, etc.
Kg is mass. Mass is the same everywhere. If you convert 2.45 kg is 5.40 pounds weight at Earth's sea level. 5.40 pounds on Earth would be 0.882 pounds on the moon
You would weigh around 13.4 pounds.
Weight is a measurement of the pull of gravity on something. I would weigh differently on Jupiter than I would on Earth, so what I think you are referring to is mass. The moon's mass is approximately 7.36 X 10^32 kilograms, or about 8.11301125 × 10^19 short tons. This is the same as saying it is 81,100,000,000,000,000,000 tons. If you think that is large, consider that the Earth is 81 times heavier! Click the link below :-)
52.4 billion pounds
81 billion is written out as 81,000,000,000. There are nine zeros in one billion, so you can either add nine zeros to 81 or move the decimal point nine places to the right to find your answer. Both methods will give you the same result of 81,000,000,000.
With its smaller mass, the Moon exerts only about 1/6 the gravity as the Earth, so objects would weigh just one-sixth of their Earth weight on the lunar surface. This is why the astronauts were able to float up off the surface as they walked there, even in their heavy spacesuits.
No, essentially mass = gravity the earths mass is roughly 81 * that of the moon, if you stood at the same distance from both, the force on you from the earth would be 81 * that of the moon.
Hurricane Katrina, a storm that the United States in August of 2005 cause about $81 billion in damage, marking it as the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history.
she would weigh about 81 lbs
If he weighs 80 pounds on the earth, then he would weigh about 13.1 pounds on the moon.That's not counting his space-suit, helmet, oxygen tank, radio, heater, lead boots, etc.
Earth has about 50 times the volume of the Moon (and 81 times the mass of the Moon).
I think 81 pounds
you are slightly over weight because i am 4' 10" and weigh 81 lbs