15 stone
The mass of a 95 kg object remains 95 kg regardless of its location; mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object. On Earth, a 95 kg object will experience a gravitational force that we commonly refer to as weight, which is equal to mass multiplied by the acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s^2). So, on Earth, a 95 kg object would weigh approximately 933 N (95 kg * 9.81 m/s^2).
To convert Newtons (N) to kilograms (kg), you can use the formula: mass (kg) = force (N) / gravitational acceleration (m/s²). Assuming standard gravity of approximately 9.81 m/s², 784 N is equivalent to about 79.9 kg (784 N ÷ 9.81 m/s² ≈ 79.9 kg).
1 MPa = 1000000 N/m2 and 1 N = 1 kg*m/s2
35 kg is equivalent to 343.35 N (35 kg multiplied by the acceleration due to gravity, which is 9.81 m/s^2).
It depends on what you are weighing (steel, wheat wool etc). Stones vary in weight between 8 and 14 lb. For human weight a stone is equal to 14 lb (approximately 62.3 Newtons if you are fastidious about mass and weight) or 6.35 kg. 20 stone (note the plural of stone is stone) is 280 lb. or 127 kg. (or of course 1246 N.)
12 kg dog on Earth: 117.6 N 12 kg dog on Mars: 44.52 N (~72% less)
just the o and the n.
A fraction of 95 is expressed in the form n/95 where n is any number.
A 60 kg person weighs 588 N on Earth. This is because weight is equal to mass multiplied by the acceleration due to gravity, which is approximately 9.81 m/s^2. So, 60 kg × 9.81 m/s^2 = 588 N.
Short answer 1.3 x 102 N (on moon) 7.5 x 102 N (on Earth if g = 9.80 N/kg Long Answer Since the category is "The Moon" gravity will be assumed to be 1.63 m/s2 (N/kg = m/s2) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitation_of_the_Moon W = mg W = (77 kg)(1.63 N/kg) = 125.51 -> 1.3 x 102 N (significant figures) for earth, just substitute in 9.80 N/kg for 1.63 N/kg W = (77 kg)(9.80 N/kg) = 7.5 x 102 N
5,400 N.
8 N