60 kilograms.
Your mass never changes. It's what you're made of, and it's constant as long as you don't do marathons or overeat.
The force between you and the planet you're standing on at the moment is what changes. That's called your "weight".
60 Kg. Mass doesn't change on the moon, weight does.
The person's mass on the moon is still 60 kilograms. Their weight would be about 10 kg.
The mass remains 8 kg because mass is always constant. The weight would be 10 N, or one sixth of 60 N.
A man that weighs 60 kg on Earth would weigh less on the moon. He would weigh 9.9 kg on the moon.
The diameter of the Moon is 3,474 km and the diameter of the Earth is 12,742 km. This makes the Moon approximately 27% the size of the Earth. The mass of the Moon is 7.347 x 1022 kg and the mass of the Earth is 5.97x 1024 kg. The mass of the Moon is only 1.2% of the mass of the Earth.
60 Kg. Mass doesn't change on the moon, weight does.
The person's mass on the moon is still 60 kilograms. Their weight would be about 10 kg.
The mass remains 8 kg because mass is always constant. The weight would be 10 N, or one sixth of 60 N.
No, your mass remains exactly the same. It is gravity that changes. The moon has about 1/6 the gravity of the surface of the earth, so you weigh about 1/6 as much. For example, a person who has a mass of 60 kg weighs about 132 pounds on earth, or about 22 pounds on the moon, but the mass remains 60 kg.
A man that weighs 60 kg on Earth would weigh less on the moon. He would weigh 9.9 kg on the moon.
The diameter of the Moon is 3,474 km and the diameter of the Earth is 12,742 km. This makes the Moon approximately 27% the size of the Earth. The mass of the Moon is 7.347 x 1022 kg and the mass of the Earth is 5.97x 1024 kg. The mass of the Moon is only 1.2% of the mass of the Earth.
The mass on the moon will remain the same, 20 kg If the object's mass is 20 kg, then it's 20 kg. On Earth, on the moon, on Mars, or floating weightless in a space ship coasting from one of them to another. Weight depends on where you are, but mass doesn't.
Earth's diameter about 7925 miles. Moon's diameter about 2160 miles. The diameter of the Moon is 3,474 km and the diameter of the Earth is 12,742 km. This makes the Moon approximately 27% the size of the Earth. The mass of the Moon is 7.347 x 1022 kg and the mass of the Earth is 5.97x 1024 kg. The mass of the Moon is only 1.2% of the mass of the Earth.
The moon is not half the size of the earth. the earth has a mass of 3.98 X 1024 kg, and the moon only has a mass of 7.34 X 1022 kg, which is only about 0.012300 Earth masses.
This is a trick question. Objects weigh less on the moon than they do on the Earth, however, objects have exactly the same amount of mass on the moon as they do on the Earth. So the 4 kg stone still has 4 kg of mass on the moon. But it only weighs about 2/3 of a kg on the moon.
The kilogram is a measure of mass, not a measure of force. His mass will remain the same (i.e. 60kg) regardless of the gravitational field he is in. But as the moon has a weaker gravitational field than the Earth the bathroom scales that stopped at 60 on the Earth will stop at 10 on the Moon.
Calculate the mass on Earth (gravity = 9.8), and assume that the mass on the Moon will be the same.