I would weigh 30lbs 5.9oz.
Well your weight on earth is given by the equation weight = mass x gravity. The different gravity constant on the moon is what changes your weight, but your mass remains the same. The weight formula on the moon would be the same only with the different gravity constant. So putting these equations together we get:
weight on moon = mass x gravity constant of moon
weight on moon = (weight on earth/gravity constant of earth) x gravity constant of moon
Then we plug in the gravity constants and get the final conversion equation:
weight on moon = (weight on earth/ 9.8) x 1.6
Note: The constants are given with the units m/s2 but because they cancel each other out, you can enter your weight with any units and solve for your weight on the moon in the same units.
Hope this helps!
Well actually you have no weight on the Moon you just are weightless because there is no gravity...
About 1/6 of your weight on the Earth. The weight on the Moon is about 1.6 Newton/kilogram.
nope, weight is relative to gravitational force. The astronaut would have the same mass though.
Multiply the weight of the object on earth by 1/6, then subtract the product from the original weight of the object. Weight=88 lbs. W=88x(1/6) W=14.6666666666666666666666666666667 or 14 and 2/3 W=88-14 and 2/3 Weight on the moon=73.333333333333333333333 or 73 and 1/3 lbs.
The mass of an object remains the same on the moon. But since the moon is smaller than Earth gravitational pull of the moon is considerably weaker therefore things "weigh" less. im not sure the ratio of the moon and earths gravity but it might be 1/5 the gravitational pull of earth on the moon- no entirely sure.
It's the number you would read if you placed a bathroom scale on the surface of the moon and
placed the object on the bathroom scale. Exactly the same definition of 'weight' as on Earth.
The weight of an object when it's on the surface of the moon is 16.5% (rounded)
of its weight when it's on the surface of Earth.
You would weigh 1/6 of your weight on earth if you were on the moon.
weight
No. The mass of an object does not change. However and object's weight, which is a function of mass and gravity, is less on the moon than on earth.
10 kilograms, of course. If you take an object to the Moon, its weight will change, but its mass won't.
mass is constant 2kg on earth is 2kg on the moon. Weight depends on gravity. W = mg where g is grav. acceleration. Since gravity is less on the moon, then weight is less on the moon for the same object
Weight = mass x gravityThe mass of the same object, taken to the Moon, will basically not change. The Moon's gravitational field, however, is less - about 1/6 that of the Earth.
weight
Such an object's mass would not change, or it wouldn't change significantly. Its weight will be reduced, approximately by a factor of 6.
No, mass is a fundamental property of an object that remains constant regardless of its location. Weight, which is the force of gravity acting on an object's mass, may vary depending on the object's location due to differences in gravitational pull.
Mass does not change when you are on the moon, as mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object. Weight, however, does change because weight is the force of gravity acting on an object, and the gravitational pull on the moon is weaker than that on Earth.
The mass of an object would remain the same on the moon as it is on Earth. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, so it does not change with location. However, the weight of the object would be less on the moon due to the moon's lower gravity compared to Earth.
No. The mass of an object does not change. However and object's weight, which is a function of mass and gravity, is less on the moon than on earth.
10 kilograms, of course. If you take an object to the Moon, its weight will change, but its mass won't.
It is because the gravity on the moon is one sixth of the gravity on the Earth
mass is constant 2kg on earth is 2kg on the moon. Weight depends on gravity. W = mg where g is grav. acceleration. Since gravity is less on the moon, then weight is less on the moon for the same object
Your weight on the moon is one-sixth (1/6) what it is on earth.
The weight of a 10-kg object on the Moon would be approximately 1/6th of its weight on Earth. This is because the gravitational pull on the Moon is about 1/6th that of Earth's gravity.