multiply your weight by 0.17
Multiply any earth weight by 0.163 to get the moon weight of the same object.
To find the weight of a student on the Moon, we can use the fact that the Moon's gravity is approximately 1/6th that of Earth's. If the student's weight on Earth is 420 N, their weight on the Moon would be 420 N ÷ 6, which equals 70 N. Therefore, the student's weight on the Moon would be 70 N.
To find your weight on the moon, you would divide your weight on Earth by 6 (since the moon's gravity is approximately 1/6th of Earth's gravity). So, for example, if you weigh 180 pounds on Earth, you would weigh around 30 pounds on the moon.
10.02 pounds. Take the weight and multiply it by .167 to find the "Moon weight"
Weight on the Moon can be calculated using the Moon's gravitational acceleration, which is about 1/6th that of Earth's. To find the weight on the Moon, you divide the Earth weight by 6. Therefore, a person who weighs 690 N on Earth would weigh approximately 115 N on the Moon.
Everything on the moon weighs 1/6 what it weighs on earth. To find the weight of something on the moon, simply divide it by 6.
You weight on the moon is 16.5% of what your weight is on Earth.
People weigh only one sixth as much on the moon as they do on Earth. Just divide by 6.
Your Weight on the Moon was created in 1994.
you dont have weight on the moon !
Your weight . . . the weight of anything on Luna, our moon, is a sixth of its weight on Earth.
A 185-pound human would weigh approximately 30.8 pounds on the Moon. This is because the Moon's gravitational force is about one-sixth that of Earth's. Therefore, to find the weight on the Moon, you can divide the weight on Earth by 6.