Well, id you were just in empty outer space-you would way absoloutley nothing. There is no gravity in outer space, the planets provide the gravity. But if you were talking about the moon, a 100 pound person would weight 12 pounds on the moon.
1 gallon of sand - except in outer space, where the would both weigh nothing.1 gallon of sand - except in outer space, where the would both weigh nothing.1 gallon of sand - except in outer space, where the would both weigh nothing.1 gallon of sand - except in outer space, where the would both weigh nothing.
They would weigh 112.5lbs.
Depends on the force of gravity acting on the body. In outer space, for example, it would weigh nothing whereas on a white dwarf or a neutron star its weight would be enough to crush you (though you would not be able to survive on such a body anyway).
A 100lb person would weigh 88.6lbs, though there is no real surface to stand on, since it's a gas planet.
On Earth, the person weighs 165.3 pounds. On the Moon, he would weigh 27.3 pounds.
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In space, nothing has any weight, regardless of its mass.
John Glenn was the first American to be in space. Another example would be Neil Armstrong, the first person to walk on the moon.
what should you pack to outer space and prepare
Is your question "what do you weigh different objects on in space...", or "why would you attempt to weigh an object in space"...?
Example: 738 East NORTHSTAR Lane Outer-space, Outer-space nowhere
Example: 738 East NORTHSTAR Lane Outer-space, Outer-space nowhere
Yes, you would see the same way in outer space as you do on Earth.
scared.
you would die
You would weigh nothing. You still have mass, but mass is different than weight. Ever wonder why they say you are "weightless" in space? It's because of that: you would weigh nothing in space.
in Outer Space