It could, if it contained enough air. To float on water, you would need about 1 liter of air for every kilogram you want to keep afloat.
you are overweight. for your height you should be 100kg
38% of earths. If a man weighing 100kg on earth he would weigh 62 kg on mercury.
On Mercury, the gravitational acceleration is approximately 3.7 m/s^2, which is about 38% of Earth's gravity (9.81 m/s^2). Therefore, a 100kg object on Mercury would have a weight of 370N (100kg * 3.7 m/s^2).
The weight of a 100 kg object is 100 kg. Kilograms are a unit of weight.
Density = Mass/Volume = 100/50 kg/cc = 2 kg/cc
The impact force on a 100kg object dropping 2 meters can be calculated using the formula F = mgh, where F is the force, m is the mass, g is the acceleration due to gravity (approximately 9.81 m/s^2), and h is the height. Plugging in the values, the impact force would be approximately 1962 N.
100 kilograms is equivalent to 15 stone 10 pounds.
The question is ill-posed. Weight is mesured in Newtons (N) as it's a force, it's mass is measured in kg. There are ctually two questions mixed together here. Let's answer both: 1) If an astronaut has a mass of 100kg on earth what is his mass on the moon? 100kg - put him on a frictionless surface and try and accelerate him, it's just has hard on the moon as on earth (or anywhere else for that matter). 2) If an astronaut weighs 981N on the surface of the earth (as an astronaut of mass 100kg would) how much does he weigh on the moon? Surface gravity on the earth is 9.81m/s/s which is how we end up with the 100kg astronaut weighing 981N. On the moon surface gravity is only 1.62m/s/s so the same astronaut would weigh 162N - about 1 sixth that on earth.
100kg
100kg
Yes, a very big male can weigh 100kg's, but normally averages 60 kg's. (male)
100 kilograms is equal to 15.75 stones, 220.46 pounds, and 3527.4 ounces.