If your mass is 100kg on earth your weight on earth is 980 N on earth. The moons gravity is roughly 1.6 m/s^2 thus your weight will be 160 N
I weigh 32pounds 4.3ounces on the moon, when I step out of my space-suit.
200lb on earth would be precisly 50lb on the moon as the moons gravity is only a quarter of ours
You would weigh about 1/6 as much on the moon as you weigh on earth if you were not wearing heavy equipment. I would weigh about 560 ounces on the moon.
The moon Io is the densest moon of Jupiter. You would weigh about 18.3% of what you weigh on Earth. Jupiter's largest moon, Ganymede, is the largest moon in the solar system, with a larger diameter than Mercury but with much less mass. Ganymede's larger diameter and low density mean you would weigh slightly less (14.6%) than on the Moon (about 16.6% of your weight on Earth).
On the Moon, you'd weigh 38.25 pounds.
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the moon has lots of craters but one fact is that the actual moon has 77 million other moons.
About 12.8
Mars' moons are much smaller than, for example, Earth's Moon, or the larger moons of Jupiter. A large moon will have a larger gravity, which will tend to pull the moon together into a spherical shape.
No. they weigh the same. The terminology of a half moon refers to how much of the moon can be seen.
The moon has plenty of gravity. In accordance with its mass and radius, any object weighs about 16.5% as much on the moon's surface as it does on the Earth's surface.
If you weighed 100kg on Earth, you would weigh 13.2kg on the Moon
1 kg mass would weigh about 167 grams on the moon.