From the spelling and general erudition of the question, we must assume, although it's not clearly stated, that the 75 N is the person's weight on earth.
Weight (gravitational force) is directly proportional to the local acceleration of gravity.
If the gravitational force is 75 N on earth, and the gravitational acceleration is increased by a factor of 2.5, then the new gravitational force is also 2.5 times as great = (75 x 2.5) = 187.5 Newtons.
By the way, this guy has to be the Eddie Arcaro among astronauts, obviously selected for the Jupiter mission because of his extremely economical use of rocket fuel on the way.
The guy weighs 75 Newton = a little less than 17 pounds !
On Jupiter, you'd weigh 175.50 pounds.
2.5 times heavier than the Earth
Jupiter. It's gravity is 2.528 times greater than earths.
The acceleration of gravity depends on how far you arefrom the center of the object.If you stand on the surface of each one, then Jupiter isthe strongest, followed by Earth, Mars, and the Moonbeing the weakest.
Jupiter's gravity is 2.364 times greater than Earth's. So, just multiply your weight by 2.364
True. Jupiter has a much larger mass than Earth, approximately 318 times greater.
On Mars, there is low gravity, so there you could jump twice as high as you can on Earth. The acceleration due to gravity on mars is 3.71 m/s2, which is 0.379 times that of Earth. (The gravity on Earth is 2.64 times greater than the gravity on Mars.)
Jupiter. It's gravity is 2.528 times greater than earths.
Near Earth, the acceleration (due to Earth's gravity) is approximately 9.8 meters/second2. In other places, for example at a greater distance from Earth, or on the Moon or on other planets, the acceleration due to gravity takes on other values.
It is greater at poles than at equator.
The acceleration of gravity depends on how far you arefrom the center of the object.If you stand on the surface of each one, then Jupiter isthe strongest, followed by Earth, Mars, and the Moonbeing the weakest.
The answer is actually Jupiter.The acceleration due to gravity is greater on the surface of Jupiter than it isat the surface of any other planet in our solar system (assuming that a surfacecan be defined for each planet).
The gravitaional forces on Jupiter are greater than here on Earth, so the force on your body is greater. This increases your weight. Your mass remains the same though. Force(or weight) = mass * acceleration. Acceleration is gravitational constant. On earth it is 9.81 m/s2. On Jupiter it is 24.79 m/s, or about 2.5 times that of earth..
No. The gravity of Jupiter more than twice as strong as that on Earth.
The force of gravity on Jupiter is 23.1m/s2. Compared to Earth, which has a force of gravity of 9.8m/s2, Jupiter's gravity is 2.4x greater.
you would weigh more on Jupiter because of the greater gravity
The gravity on Jupiter is 2.5 greater than the gravity on Earth. The gravity is so great because of Jupiter's enormous size, which increases its gravitational force.
No. It's about 3.80 m/s/s as opposed to 9.81 on earth.
The acceleration due to gravity is greater at sea level.