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Mercury, being a planet, does not have a specific weight measured in Newtons. Its weight would vary depending on its mass and the gravitational force acting on it, which is about 3.7 m/s² for Mercury, compared to Earth's 9.81 m/s².
In countries that use metric a humans weight is usually measures in Kilograms for example someone who weighs 220 lbs would weigh 100 kg.
Being on Mercury will change your weight because you would be pulled down with a smaller force. You would weigh on Mercury 0.38 time your weight on Earth.
we would die
A refrigerator would typically be measured in kilograms (kg) in terms of weight in the metric system.
If the measured weight was too high, the calculated weight of the unknown would also be too high. If the measured weight was too low, the calculated weight of the unknown would also be too low. If there was no error in the measured weight, the calculated weight of the unknown would remain unchanged.
You would weigh approximately 45 pounds on Mercury if you weighed 120 pounds on Earth. This is because Mercury has lower gravity compared to Earth.
The Newton is the unit of force, not of mass. Mass is constant but weight varies depending upon how and where this force is being measured. So, a context would be necessary to describe weight as measured in Newtons. Mercury's mass is 3.3 x 10^33 kilogrammes; if you were to weigh it at sea-level on Earth that would exert about 3.2 x 10^34 Netwons of force.
vacuum is measured in pressure. To get a vacuum you need a negative pressure. that would be inches of mercury hg
less
It depends what the object is.
Humans need to bring food, water, oxygen,