Your mass is always the same.
That is because Earth has more gravity. Weight = mass x gravity.
Because the force of gravity exerting on objects on the moon is much lower than that of the earth.
Mass is an inherent property of an object and it does not change. Most commonly, we weigh objects on the earth. An object's weight depends on the attraction by gravity to another object. The formula for weight on the earth is weight = (a constant) x (mass of object) x (mass of earth)/(d-squared) where d = distance between center of mass of object and center of mass of earth d-squared is the distance d, raised to the second power. A person weighs slightly less on the top of a mountain than they weigh at sea level. Because moon's mass is only about one-sixth the mass of the earth, the weight of a man on the moon is about 1/6 of his weight on the earth.
This is a ludicrous question. 53106 pounds on Jupiter is equivalent to approx 10 tons on earth. No person can weigh 10 tons!
Weight is the measurement of gravitational force on an object, relevant to Earth.
On a larger planet, such as Jupiter or Saturn.
The reason is because the mass is like the volume and the weight is like how heavy an object is.
weight on jupiter=((mass of jupiter)*(Radius of earth)2/(mass of earth)*(Radius of jupiter)2)*weight on earth
The objects weight is a measure of that force.
The objects weight is a measure of that force.
That is because Earth has more gravity. Weight = mass x gravity.
There are lots of ifs in this question and answer. If the 100 pound Earth object could rest on the outer surface of Jupiter the answer would be 250 pounds. But, Jupiter is a gas planet. That is, Jupiter is primarily made of gas and liquid. So, the object could not rest on the outer surface. There may be a solid surface near it's center but no one knows. Jupiter is 318 times as heavy as Earth so if Jupiter were solid and the size of Earth the object would weigh 318 times a much or 31,800 pounds. But, it is much larger than Earth so the outer surface is much farther from the center. The farther away the object is from the center the less the object will weigh.
Weight is the force of gravity on an object. An object's weight/gravity increases with its mass, and decreases with its distance from the gravity producer (for example, planet Earth).
The reason is because the mass is like the volume and the weight is like how heavy an object is.
An object that weighs 1 pound on Earth weighs about 2pounds 8.6ounces on Jupiter. An object that weighs 1 pound on Jupiter weighs about 6.3ounces on Earth. You expected a big, amazing number, because Jupiter is the planet with the most mass. But the force of gravity between two objects also depends on the distance between their centers, and Jupiter is so big that its surface is far from its center. So the size cancels out a lot of the effect of the huge mass, as far as weight is concerned.
No. Mass is the measure of how much matter is in an object, while weight is how that mass is influenced by gravity. For example, if you were to move an object from earth to Jupiter, its mass would remain the same, but its weight would increase because Jupiter is larger and would pull on it more.
Because the gravitational force between any two objects depends on the product of both their masses. The object's weight on earth depends on the object's mass and the earth's mass, whereas its weight on the moon depends on the object's mass and the moon's mass. Since the moon's mass is very different from the earth's mass, the object's weight is also different there.