Mercury orbits the sun once every 88 days, so a 'Mercurian year' is about three months long. For every one Earth year, you will have just over 4 'Mercurian years'.
No
For every 100 pounds of a person's weight on Earth, he would weigh 37 pounds on Mercury. Every child is above average.
No. On Mercury you would weigh 37% of what you weigh on Earth.
If memory serves, Mercury revolves around the sun once every 88 days, so a year on Mercury would be just shy of three months on earth.
You would weigh 27.2lbs on Mercury.
No
At least twenty people are born around the Earth every day. so the least would be February.
Mercury's year is 88 Earth days. Its tilt is such that for one orbit around the sun (88 Earth days) one side is always in light. For the following entire orbit (88 Earth days) that side would be darkness (night). So in two Mercurian years (two orbits), there is only one day (sunrise to sunrise). Thus it is on MERCURY that you have two birthdays in one single day.
Earth
For every 100 pounds of a person's weight on Earth, he would weigh 37 pounds on Mercury. Every child is above average.
No. On Mercury you would weigh 37% of what you weigh on Earth.
You would be only 38% of your weight on Mercury as you are on earth. If you weigh 180 pounds on earth you would then only weigh 68.4 pounds on Mercury.
Mercury has less gravity, so objects on Mercury would weigh less than they would on Earth
If memory serves, Mercury revolves around the sun once every 88 days, so a year on Mercury would be just shy of three months on earth.
You would weigh 27.2lbs on Mercury.
The gravity on Mercury is 38% of Earth's gravity. So, if you were 150mlbs on Earth, you would be 57 lbs on Mercury.
If you are referring to mass, then the percentage would be: Mercury = 0.330x1024kg Earth = 5.97 x1024kg Percentage = mercury/earth = 0.330x1024kg/5.97 x1024kg *100 = 5.5% If you are referring to diameter, the percentage would be: Mercury = 4879km Earth = 12,756km Percentage = mercury/earth = 4879km/12,756km *100 = 38.2%