yes Well, you could, but you could also weigh (note - not "weight") yourself in ounces, too, but it would be a bit impractical from an arithmetic standpoint.
U.S. nickels weigh 5.00 grams so that would be a better unit than a kilogram - the same mass in kg would be 0.005 kilos.
Any unit of weight can be used, but measuring a nickel in kilograms would result an inconveniently small number. A kilogram is the mass of a liter of water, a quantity that's much larger than a nickel.
The next-smallest commonly used unit is the gram, and that produces a much simpler value. In fact, US nickels are specified to weigh exactly 5.0 grams which is far easier to work with than 0.005 kilos.
The weight of a nickel is approximately 5 grams. To convert this to kilograms, you would divide 5 grams by 1000, which equals 0.005 kilograms.
90 kg
40N is 15.08N on Mars.
0.4 kg
You would weigh 120kg in a 2g environment. Weight in this case is calculated by multiplying your mass by the acceleration due to gravity (2g), so 60kg x 2 = 120kg.
About 2.4 kg, the gravity on Ceres is 1/30th that of Earth
it would be a kg.
You would weigh 17.719 kg.
She would weigh 45.0 kg.
You would weigh 120kg in a 2g environment. Weight in this case is calculated by multiplying your mass by the acceleration due to gravity (2g), so 60kg x 2 = 120kg.
You would weigh approximately one-sixth of what you weigh on earth, so 11 2/3 kg.
you would weigh like your mom
10 kg
20 kg is 20,000 grams. A US nickel weighs 5 gm so it would take 20000/5 = 4000 US nickels to weigh 20 kg. Current Canadian nickels weigh 3.95 gm so you'd need 20000/3.95 = 5064 Canadian nickels to weigh the same amount, rounded to the next whole number of coins.
A man that weighs 60 kg on Earth would weigh less on the moon. He would weigh 9.9 kg on the moon.
2 kg.
Approximately 64.4 kg.
90 kg