no........ the weight is determined by the gravitational pull on any object
gravitational pull of different planet is different. therefore, the weight changes
The weight for a Mariner 100 hp would be the same as the Mercury at 315 lbs.
Due to Mercury's lower gravity compared to Earth, people would weigh approximately 38% of their weight on Earth.
thats the same engine and same weight.
Being on Mercury will change your weight because you would be pulled down with a smaller force. You would weigh on Mercury 0.38 time your weight on Earth.
Your weight will be the same as a volume of mercury of equivalent weight.
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Gold is #79 on the periodic table of the elements, with an atomic weight of while 196.97. Mercury is #80, with an atomic weight of 200.59. However, a pound of gold is the same weight as a pound of mercury, or a pound of feathers.
You would weigh approximately 45 pounds on Mercury if you weighed 120 pounds on Earth. This is because Mercury has lower gravity compared to Earth.
less
It depends what the object is.
they share the same volume. In the Metric system, Liters are a measurement of volume, not of weight. Therefore, 10 Liters of water would share the same volume as 10 Liters of Mercury.
Atomically, no. Mercury's atomic weight is 200.59 whereas Lead's atomic weight is 207.2. So basically, if you had the exact same amount of Lead and Mercury, lead is heavier.