The weight of any object on the Moon is about 1/6 of the weight of the same object on the Earth.
If it weighs 98 newtons on Earth, then we know that its mass is about 10kg. If that figure is its weight somewhere else, then its mass is something else.
That depends on the gravity. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 Newton.
98g/s2
2000k
10 kilograms is the mass. To calculate the weight (in newtons), multiply the mass by 9.8.
That would depend on the volume (density) of the 10kg object.
Both the 10kg stack of books and the 10kg piece of Styrofoam weigh the same amount, 10kg, because weight is a measure of the force due to gravity acting on an object's mass.
If it weighs 98 newtons on Earth, then we know that its mass is about 10kg. If that figure is its weight somewhere else, then its mass is something else.
That depends on the gravity. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 Newton.
98.07 newtons (Force = mass x acceleration)
98.07 newtons (Force = mass x acceleration)
10kg
It would weigh 10kg.