It would cost at least 2.6 trillion dollars to get to Neptune if you include food, the rocket ship, gas and materials.
If you weighed 50 kg on Earth, you would weigh about 179 kg on Neptune. This is because Neptune's surface gravity is roughly 1.14 times that of Earth.
78 pounds on Neptune.
To find out how much you would weigh on Neptune, you can use the gravitational pull of Neptune, which is about 1.14 times that of Earth. If you weigh 72 pounds on Earth, you would multiply that by Neptune's gravity: 72 pounds × 1.14 = approximately 82.08 pounds. Therefore, you would weigh about 82 pounds on Neptune.
If you weighed 100 lbs on Earth you would weigh 112.5 lbs on Neptune
About 2.4 kilograms.
On Neptune, a year is equivalent to 164.8 Earth years. To calculate the age of an 11-year-old on Earth on Neptune, you would divide 11 by 164.8, which equals approximately 0.067. Therefore, an 11-year-old on Earth would be approximately 0.067 years old on Neptune, which is equivalent to about 24.5 Earth days.
No. Neptune is much larger than Earth.
One year on Neptune is 164.79 earth years. So, a decade would be ten times as much, or 1647.9 earth years.
The surface gravity of Neptune is thought to be about 1.14 times the gravity on Earth, so 100 kg on Earth would weigh about 114 kg on Neptune--except that Neptune is a gas planet and has no solid surface on which the 100kg rock could be weighed.
Neptune's gravity is 1.14 times the gravity on Earth. Therefore, someone who weighed 90 pounds on Earth would weigh 102.6 pounds on Neptune.
One orbit for Neptune takes nearly 165 Earth years (164.79 years). This is approximately 60,190 Earth days. But a day (complete rotation) for Neptune is much shorter than Earth's, about 16 Earth hours. So there are about 89,666 "Neptune days" in a "Neptune year".
Spaceflight technology is not yet at a level that it would be possible to travel to Neptune. For this reason it is hard to say how much it would cost.