Saturn is the lighest of all of the plantes for it's size. If you were to stand on it's surface, you would weigh less than standing on Earth's surface. If you dropped Saturn into an ocean the size of space, then it would float because it is less dense than the water.
You would weigh less because there is less gravity on mercury than on earth so you would weigh less!
This question is harder than it might seem. The answer is: You would weigh less on both Venus and Mars. You would weigh more on Jupiter. As regards Saturn, you could weigh more or less depending where on the planet you were. For example, at Saturn's equator the effect of the planet's rotation would be enough to reduce your effective weight to less than your Earth weight.
Venus.
Same reason the astronauts bounce around on the Moon. The Moon is smaller than Earth, so we weigh less. Saturn is bigger than Earth, so we would weigh more.
A person would weigh more on Saturn than they do on Earth due to the lack of gravity on Saturn. This is true for every planet in the solar system. For example, on Saturn an adult weighing 150 pounds would weigh 159.63 pounds on Saturn.
9% less than on Earth (in kg).
U.S. quarters minted before 1965, including the Standing Liberty, weigh 6.25 grams. A heavily worn coin might weigh slightly less.
In fact you wouldn't weigh anything, because there is no surface to place the scales. In a non surface sense, the gravitational pull or gravity is about 1.064 that of Earth. So if you weighed 100lb on Earth you would only weight about 106.4lb on Saturn.
you would weigh the least on mars. (take in account Pluto is not a planet any more)
they would weigh more. more gravity= more weightadd. With a smaller gravity, they would weigh LESS.
Objects under water seem to weigh less but they have the same mass as they would out of water.
You would weigh less, but your mass would stay the same. Weight is a result of gravity, mass is an inherent property of matter.