There isn't one.
Anything that has mass has gravity, and anything with gravity will produce a "weight".
Your mass would remain constant regardless of the planet you are on, as mass is a measure of the amount of matter in your body. However, your weight would change because weight depends on the gravitational force exerted on your mass, which varies from planet to planet. For instance, on a planet with stronger gravity, you would weigh more, while on a planet with weaker gravity, you would weigh less.
jupiter
The weight of an object on a planet depends on the planet's gravity and the mass of the object. The formula to calculate weight is Weight = Mass x Gravity. So, weight on a planet will be different from the weight on Earth depending on the planet's gravity.
Weight decreases as gravity decreases.
Your mass would be greatest on the planet Jupiter. Jupiter is the largest planet in our solar system with a strong gravitational pull, which would make your weight the heaviest there compared to other planets.
On a larger planet, such as Jupiter or Saturn.
There is no maximum weight that a planet can get to. A planet's weight depends on its mass and the gravity it has.
jupiter,neptune u would weight more...and mercury least
Astronauts' weight would vary on different planets due to differences in gravity. Their weight is determined by the gravitational pull of the planet they are on, so they would weigh less on a planet with weaker gravity and more on a planet with stronger gravity.
Venus has the closest gravity in comparision with Earth at 0.88. On Venus, you would weight 0.88 what you weigh on Earth. The next closest planet is Saturn, at 1.12.
No your mass would not change at all if you traveled from planet to planet. Mass is the amount of space an object takes up. Since different planets have different levels of gravity pushing down on you then your weight would change but unless for any reason you lost/gained weight or grown any taller/shorter your mass would not change traveling planet to planet.
you would weight about 6.4% of what you do on Earth.