A neutron star is so dense that one teaspoon (5 millilitres) of its material would have a mass over 5×1012 kg or 5,500,000,000 tons. About 900 pyramids of Giza.
The resulting force of gravity is so strong that if an object were to fall from just one meter high it would hit the surface of the neutron star at around 2,000 kilometres per second, or 4.3 million miles per hour.
See related question.
It would weigh 10kg.
The mass of a typical neutron star is believed to be between one and three times the mass of the sun. However, in size they would be much smaller than the earth, something on the order of around ten kilometers in diameter.
1,100,000,000,000 kilograms = 1.21254244 × 109 short tons
1000,0000,00000,00000,00000,000000,00000 times as much you would weigh on planet earth
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.
456 pounds
456lbs.
65.1 kg is a measure of mass. The weight of an object with mass 65.1 kg will depend upon the force of gravity at the point where it is weighed. For example, on the moon it will weigh about a sixth as much as it would on earth, whereas on a neutron star it would weigh much much more.
You would weigh 102 lb.
About 12.8
No, a neutron is slightly more massive than a proton. Both particles have roughly the same mass, but due to the different composition of their internal quarks, the neutron is slightly heavier.
If you mean in the same volume, only a tiny fraction of Earth - the neutron star is much smaller. The radius of a typical neutron star is perhaps 12 kilometers. In comparison, the Earth has a radius of about 6371 kilometers - that makes Earth's volume about 150 million times greater. (On the other hand, the neutron star has a much greater mass than Earth.)
It would weigh 10kg.
If you weighed 196 lbs on Earth, you would weigh 177.7 lbs in Venus.
you would way 1 pound if you weigh 15 pounds on earth
On Jupiter, you'd weigh 83.07
gravity