3kg on earth weighs 29.4 newtons.
On earth, 3 kg weighs 29.4 newtons. On the moon, the same 3 kg weighs 4.8 newtons. On the way there and back, the same 3 kg weighs zero newtons.
1 newton is 1 kg-m/s^2, there is no conversion. A kg is a measure of weight, while a Newton is a measure of force.
Joule is newton-meter, newton is kg m/s2. Therefore: J/kg = Nm/kg = kg m2/s2 kg = m2/s2. So, the answer is no.
A newton is a unit of force
1 [N] = 1 [kg] * 1 [m/s2]. Answer: an acceleration of 1 [m/s2].
On earth, 3 kg weighs 29.4 newtons. On the moon, the same 3 kg weighs 4.8 newtons. On the way there and back, the same 3 kg weighs zero newtons.
1 kilogram force = 9.80665 Newton
1 newton is 1 kg-m/s^2, there is no conversion. A kg is a measure of weight, while a Newton is a measure of force.
Assuming it is really 3 times as much (I did not look it up), on Earth, the gravitation is approximately 10 Newton / kilogram; on Jupiter it would be 30 Newton / Kilogram. Multiply this by 0.4 kg., and you get a weight of 12 Newton.
Joule is newton-meter, newton is kg m/s2. Therefore: J/kg = Nm/kg = kg m2/s2 kg = m2/s2. So, the answer is no.
A newton is a unit of force
On or near the surface of the Earth, 1 newton is the weight of 0.102 kg. In other places, 1 newton is the weight of a different amount of mass.
Kilogram is the unit of mass. But unit of weight will be either kg wt or newton. One kg of iron would weigh one kg wt. One kg wt = g newton Here g is acceleration due to gravity. g = 9.8 ms--2 So one kg of iron weighs 9.8 newton
One newton is equal to 0.224809 pounds.
kg. m/s
0.102 kg
1 [N] = 1 [kg] * 1 [m/s2]. Answer: an acceleration of 1 [m/s2].