A 50000 kg chair is an absurdly heavy piece of furniture - probably around 1000 times as massive as a normal chair.
Anyway, it would weigh approx 490000 newtons.
The unit "kilogram" is a measure of mass, not weight, so the mass would still be 10 kg on Mercury.However, a scale on Mercury's surface would show that the 10-kilogram item weighed only 3.8 kilograms, about 38% of its Earth weight.
If I needed to know the weight of a chair, I would weigh myself holding the chair then weigh myself again without the chair. The difference between the first and second measurements is the weight of the chair.
No. On Mercury you would weigh 37% of what you weigh on Earth.
You would weigh 102 lb.
No. You would would weigh only about 38% of your weight on Earth.
Your weight depends on the distance from the center of Earth. Weight decreases with distance from Earth's center, so if you are 50,000 miles away, you would weigh less than 40.0 pounds when compared to being 100,000 miles away. The exact weight can be determined using the inverse square law of gravitation.
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
If you weigh 1,001 lbs on Earth you would weigh 378.3 lbs on Mercury.
You would weigh about 37.8 lbs
If you weighed 30lb on Earth you would weigh a mere 2lb.
If you weigh 100lbs on Earth, you would weigh 37.8lbs on Mercury.