The difference between a person's weight on the earth and on the moon has to due with the difference between mass and weight. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter and weight is the pull of gravity on that mass. Gravity on the moon is about 83% that on earth, so if you weigh 100 lbs on earth, you will weigh approximately 17 lbs on the moon.
Several Trillion Trillion
Because gravity is relatively constant anywhere on Earth's surface.
25 pounds on the Moon.
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.
There is no difference between mass anywhere in the universe; it will always be a specific type of bonding between atoms anywhere it goes. However, weight may change due to different gravities on different planets
The weight of an object on the moon's surface is 16.3% of the same object's weight on the earth's surface.
Several Trillion Trillion
The difference between weight, OK say that your on the moon your weight is the same that it was on earth but your mass will be totally different then it was on earth.
Weight on Venus = 0.904*weight on earth.
The mass is 64.44 grams. But the difference between mass and weight is that mass is weight is how heavy it is on the planet you weigh it on and mass it the weight it is on Earth, whether is is on Earth, or not.
Because gravity is relatively constant anywhere on Earth's surface.
Because gravity is relatively constant anywhere on Earth's surface.
what is the difference between earth amd mars besides that earth has life
12 kg or 1/6th.
The difference between mum and dad's mass is 16.5 kg. The difference in their weight will be approx 161.7 Newtons on the surface of the Earth. Because their weights will depend on the force of gravity acting on them it is not possible to be precise about the difference.
It would go something like this. e = Earth's gravity m = Mercury's gravity e*0.38=m Just put whatever number in Earth's gravity and do the math.
Yes. The relationship is: weight = mass x gravity Near Earth's surface, the value for gravity is approximately 9.8 newton/kilogram.