The rock's weight or force in Newtons is 68.65
Kg is mass. Mass is the same everywhere. If you convert 2.45 kg is 5.40 pounds weight at Earth's sea level. 5.40 pounds on Earth would be 0.882 pounds on the moon
Convert 7 kg to pounds, 7x2.22 = 15.54 Pounds you way 1/6 of your normal earth weight on the moon. So 15.54 pounds divided by 6 equals 2.59 Pounds.
Answer is 3.1*10^7 seconds in a year
The earth weighs about 13,227,735,730,800,000,000,000,000 pounds (or about 6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilograms). I don't know how much that is in grams, so please don't ask :)I think it's 5,358,359,254,990,966,640,871,840 kilograms give or take a meteor or two.__________The good humor of the above answer notwithstanding, the earth is, in fact, weightless. The pound is a measure of weight, and weight is meaningless for objects that are flying around is space. The earth's mass is a much more important measure. The earth's mass is 5.9736 × 1024 kg as suggested above. If you want an equivalence in pounds just for the sake of comparison, I would argue that using the earth's gravity as a reference might not be correct. If anything, the earth is under the gravitational influence of the sun, to which it is theoretically 'falling' in its orbital journey. Wouldn't it make more sense to calculate the "weight" of earth based on the weight of one gram as measured at our distance from the sun?The radius of the Earth is 6,400,000 meters (6,999,125 yards). If you plug all of these values in and solve for M1, you find that the mass of the Earth is 6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilograms (6E+24 kilograms / 1.3E+25 pounds)If the earth weighs 6 Septillion tons, you have to do 6 Septillion x 1 Ton = 120,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 or 120 Septillion Pounds6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (6E+24) kilograms or 1.3E+25 pounds based on gravitational attraction.
In our solar system, Jupter has two and a half times the mass of the other planets combined. Note that outside the solar system, exoplanets have been discovered tens of times the mass of Jupiter.
About 68.6 newtons or 15.4 pounds.
On the earth, a mass of 7 kg weighs 68.6 newtons (15.4 pounds). On the moon, the same 7 kg weighs 11.2 newtons (2.52 pounds). It all depends on the gravitational field you are in!
On earth, 7 kg of mass weighs 68.6 newtons (15.4 pounds).
7 kg. To be precise, kg. is a measure of mass, not weight; weight should be measured in Newton.
7 N at the earth's surface equals 0.714kg
Kg is mass. Mass is the same everywhere. If you convert 2.45 kg is 5.40 pounds weight at Earth's sea level. 5.40 pounds on Earth would be 0.882 pounds on the moon
On earth, 7.7 kg of mass weighs 16.98 pounds. (rounded) Different weight in other places.
42 kg
The weight is 12 kg.
Convert 7 kg to pounds, 7x2.22 = 15.54 Pounds you way 1/6 of your normal earth weight on the moon. So 15.54 pounds divided by 6 equals 2.59 Pounds.
7 kg
.7 kg. Kilograms are a measure of mass.