On Earth, 1,500 kg of mass weighs 14,710 newtons.
An object with a mass of 20 kg weighs about 196 Newtons (44 pounds) on earth.
588.399 newtons. (60 * 9.80665)
They will weigh approx 22.25 Newtons.
Multiply the mass (in kilograms) by the gravitation (9.8 meters per second square, near the Earth's surface), and you get the weight (in Newtons).
It is approx 0.0245 newtons.
186 pounds (827 newtons)
40 kilograms
The weight you specify refers to the weight on Earth (in Newtons, and assuming a gravity of 9.8).
A mass of 60 pounds on Earth weighs 588 Newtons. On Uranus the same mass would weigh minus 67 Newtons more.
If your weight on Earth is 545 newtons then on the moon your weight will be 1/6 as much or about 9.6kg
An object with a mass of 20 kg weighs about 196 Newtons (44 pounds) on earth.
Well, if you weigh 150 pounds on Earth you would weigh 56.5 pounds on Mars.
9.8 newtons
not weight, but a little less than 6 newtons
The 40kg student's force (weight) on Earth is about 392.28 newtons. (Force = mass x acceleration). Earth's acceleration is 9.807 meters per second squared.
20 lb
It depends on the shoe you fool. Weight the shoe in pounds, and then convert it.