48 pounds and 8.03 ounces.
22kg equals 216 N at the earth's surface.
It is equal to 4.85 pounds approximately. Kilogram is the metric unit and pound is the imperial unit for mass. 1 Kilogram is 2.204 pounds. So we multiply kg by 2.204 to get the equivalent pounds.
The standard hydrogen bomb is a Teller-Ulam design which utilizes a Fission-Fusion-Fission sequence. The primary is a fission device, likely boosted with tritium, not too different from the Fat Man implosion bomb used over Nagasaki; although it is much more efficient. The minimum critical mass for Pu-239 is about 25 pounds (11kg). The secondary is a fusion-fission device, utilizing the x-ray radiation from the primary to compress & heat a light element. At the center of this is a hollow tube of Pu-239. As the secondary compresses, the Pu-239 tube (aka "spark plug") compresses as well and achieves criticality giving a fission reaction. This may require another 25 pounds (~11kg) of Pu-239. So a rough estimate is about 50lbs (~22kg) for both fission processes. However, there are ways to create a super-critical mass using less material through the use of neutron reflectors, tritium boosting, neutron-initiators and other methods that are not common knowledge. Nations that possess nuclear weapons don't give precise details for reasons of national security, so an exact answer to your question would require a security clearance of some sort, and a need to know. So the best answer to your question is not much more than 50 pounds, or 11kg per weapon, probably a lot less.
not much
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22kg equals 22000000mg
18KG is the average but it ranges from 14Kg to 22kg
The four largest moons are; Io (8.93×10 to the 22kg) Europa (4.8×10 to the 22kg) Ganymede, the largest moon(1.48×10 to the 23kg) Callisto (1.08×10 to the 23kg)
48 pounds and 8.03 ounces.
21 kg thats about 46 lbs
Divide by 1000 because there are 1000g in 1 kg. 22000g = 22kg
Divide grams by 1,000. Thus, 22000g = 22000 / 1000 = 22kg
22kg equals 216 N at the earth's surface.
The Big Show weighs 485 pounds currently. He has weighed 500 pounds, 493 pounds, 440 pounds, and 441 pounds.
It doesn't change at all. Just because an object starts moving, doesn't mean it's mass changes. What does change, however, is it's momentum.
According to Recycle Now Schools.com website, paper waste for secondary school students it is approximately 22kg or 48.4 lbs and for primary school students, approximately 45kg or 99 lbs (per academic year, per student).