The Moon's mass is 8.09942316 × 10^19 tons.
No, the moon's weight is approximately 73.5 million billion tons. This weight is based on its mass and gravitational pull, which is much greater than 81 billion tons.
Well, that's a tough question because weight is based on gravity, and so the weight would depend on where you were. On the moon you weigh about 1/6 of what you do on Earth. But if you wanted to measure the mass instead (you would weigh less on the moon, but you would have the same mass), the moon weighs about 73,430,000,000,000,000,000 tons, and there are 2000 pounds to a ton.
The weight of a spaceship will vary depending on its size, design, and materials used in construction. Larger spacecraft that carry heavy payloads, such as crewed spacecraft or satellites, can weigh several tons to hundreds of tons. Smaller spacecraft, like cubesats, may only weigh a few kilograms.
The mass of the Moon is approximately 7.35 × 10^22 kilograms, which is equivalent to about 7.35 × 10^19 metric tons. This makes the Moon about 1/81 the mass of Earth. Its relatively small mass contributes to its weaker gravitational pull compared to our planet.
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 :-)
it is 161,542,952 tons heavy
How heavy a spitfire
About 2 tons of feathers or 300 tons of heavy metal.
Yes, 48 tons is 96,000 pounds.
5,100,000,000,000,000 tons
About 2 tons
about 1000 tons
400,000 tons
There are Moais from a few tons to 86 tons.
It's heavy. A ton is a thousand kilograms. A big car might weigh two tons, so 2,000 tons is how much a thousand cars weigh.
30 short tons
1