6 pounds
The mass always stays the same, but because gravity is 38% of Earth, weight is only 38 pounds for every 100 pounds on earth.
It doesn't. An object's mass doesn't change, no matter where it is. What changes isthe object's weight, because weight is the gravitational attraction between the objectand something else that also has mass. So the weight is going to depend on what theother object is, how much mass IT has, and how far apart the two objects are.An object that weighs 6 pounds when it's on Earth weighs about 1 pound when it'son the Moon.
About 30.5 pounds
If the object's mass is 120g, then it's 120g. 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.
Exactly the same. Mass is the same everywhere. The weight will be 1/6 less on the moon though.
Its mass would be 6 pounds...
An object that weighs 50 pounds at standard conditions has a mass of 22.680 kilograms.
On earth, the object's mass is 453.6 kilograms with a force of about 4448.5 Newtons.
if you are given the mass of an object in pounds
It is 4.5 pounds per cubic foot.
A pound is a measure of mass, not weight so an object cannot weigh 115 pounds. Assuming that you meant the object weighed 115 poundals, the answer is 1.62 kilograms.
54.43kg
An object with 3 kg of mass weighs 29.421 newtons (6.614 pounds) on Earth, and 4.869 newtons (1.095 pounds) on the Moon. (all rounded)
The weight is a force and should be called 'poundsforce'. To get mass, in pounds, divide by 32.2
97 kilograms = 213.85 (213.848394) pounds.
140 kilograms = 308.7 (308.647167) pounds.
141 kilograms = 310.9 (310.85179) pounds.