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5.95 kg

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aschulz

Lvl 9
2y ago
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Jacinthe Jakubowski

Lvl 1
2y ago
awsum thanks ?
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Wiki User

15y ago

Actually, 36kg is a mass, not a quantity of weight. Mass is the amount of matter contained within an object, and weight is the force of gravity on that mass. So his mass wouldn't change. On earth, weight is measured in newtons, for the SI unit system. To get weight, take the mass and mulitiply it by the gravitaitional constant of whatever planet you are on. For the earth, it is 9.8 m/s2. For the moon, it is 1.6 m/s2. So on earth, his weight would be 352.8 newtons. For the moon, it would be 57.6 newtons. Essentially, you weigh about 1/6th on the moon as you do on earth. Hope this helps!

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14y ago

First of all, kg is not a measure of weight, but a measure of mass. This is a common misconception. To get weight, multiply mass by the gravitational constant. So the weight is actually 490 newtons on earth. The gravitaional constant on earth is 9.8 meters per second squared. On the moon it is 1.6 meters per second squared. Multiply 50 kg times 1.6=80 Newtons.

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14y ago

Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight. If you had a mass of 34 kg. on Earth, then you would also have a mass of 34 kg. on the Moon. Your weight on Earth would be about 340 Newton; on the Moon, 1/6 of this, or about 57 Newton.

Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight. If you had a mass of 34 kg. on Earth, then you would also have a mass of 34 kg. on the Moon. Your weight on Earth would be about 340 Newton; on the Moon, 1/6 of this, or about 57 Newton.

Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight. If you had a mass of 34 kg. on Earth, then you would also have a mass of 34 kg. on the Moon. Your weight on Earth would be about 340 Newton; on the Moon, 1/6 of this, or about 57 Newton.

Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight. If you had a mass of 34 kg. on Earth, then you would also have a mass of 34 kg. on the Moon. Your weight on Earth would be about 340 Newton; on the Moon, 1/6 of this, or about 57 Newton.

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Wiki User

14y ago

A person whose mass is 50 kg weighs 490 newtons (110.2 pounds) on earth, and would

weigh 80 newtons (18 pounds) on the moon. His mass of 50 kg doesn't change, no matter

where he takes it.

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Wiki User

14y ago

The earth has a gravity of 1G

The moon has a gravity of 0.165G

so to convert the weight of something on earth to what it would weight on the moon, just multiply by 0.165

48 * 0.165 = 7.92 KG

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Wiki User

14y ago

Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight. If you had a mass of 34 kg. on Earth, then you would also have a mass of 34 kg. on the Moon. Your weight on Earth would be about 340 Newton; on the Moon, 1/6 of this, or about 57 Newton.

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Wiki User

13y ago

About 9.79 pounds.

(Not counting your space suit, boots, air tanks, and everything else

you need to carry just to survive there.)

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14y ago

I assume you mean, an object that weighs 50N on Earth. On the Moon, it would weigh less, by a factor of 6 approximately.

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Wiki User

13y ago

14 pounds (rounded)

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Q: How much would 50N weigh on the moon?
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