You would weigh around 13.4 pounds.
If he weighs 80 pounds on the earth, then he would weigh about 13.1 pounds on the moon.That's not counting his space-suit, helmet, oxygen tank, radio, heater, lead boots, etc.
yes
With its smaller mass, the Moon exerts only about 1/6 the gravity as the Earth, so objects would weigh just one-sixth of their Earth weight on the lunar surface. This is why the astronauts were able to float up off the surface as they walked there, even in their heavy spacesuits.
81 newtons.
81 newtons.
81 newtons.
Mass is a characteristic of the person or object. It stays with him/it and doesn't change no matter where he/it goes. "Newtons" is not a measurement of mass. It's a measurement of force, and it could represent the person's weight. If the person weighs 490 newtons on Earth, then his mass is about 50 kilograms anywhere, and he would weigh about 81 newtons on the moon.
81 kg - 12 stone 10.6 pounds
No, essentially mass = gravity the earths mass is roughly 81 * that of the moon, if you stood at the same distance from both, the force on you from the earth would be 81 * that of the moon.
she would weigh about 81 lbs
Earth has about 50 times the volume of the Moon (and 81 times the mass of the Moon).
There are 453.59237 grams in one pound. Therefore to get amount of pounds in grams, value in grams has to be divided by amount of grams in one pound: 81 grams = [grams] / 453.59237 = 81 / 453.59237 = 0.1786 pounds