The farther you are from the center of the Earth, the less you weigh.
Heaviest . . . the lowest point on Earth's surface (shore of the Dead Sea)
Lightest,
while on the Earth . . . Top of Mt. Everest
Lighter . . . in an airplane, at altitude higher than Mt. Everest
Still lighter . . . farther from the surface
No - more on Earth - in orbit you're weightless.
Yes, you weigh less in a spaceship orbiting 800 kilometers above Earth compared to your weight on the Earth's surface. This is because weight is the force of gravity acting on an object, and gravitational force decreases with distance from the Earth's center. In orbit, you experience microgravity due to the continuous free-fall motion of the spaceship and its occupants, making you feel lighter. However, your mass remains the same in both locations.
If you weigh 300 pounds in space, you would also weigh 300 pounds on Earth. Weight is the force exerted on a mass due to gravity, and the gravitational force acting on an object is similar in space and on Earth.
you wight less because of the gravity in space
On the Moon, the space suit would weigh 30.29 pounds.
No - more on Earth - in orbit you're weightless.
That can't be calculated if you don't know her original weight. Take whatever she weighs on Earth, and divide that by four.
More gravity on Earth.
If you weigh 300 pounds in space, you would also weigh 300 pounds on Earth. Weight is the force exerted on a mass due to gravity, and the gravitational force acting on an object is similar in space and on Earth.
you wight less because of the gravity in space
On the Moon, the space suit would weigh 30.29 pounds.
If you weigh 70 pounds on earth, then you would weigh about 11.7 pounds on the moon,(without your space suit).
Weight has no value in space. Weight is a function of gravity so in space Venus doesn't weigh anything. But it does have mass - See related question.
it wont weigh anything because you are in space because of the gravity xxxx :)
Weight has little meaning in space. Mars is about 10.7% the mass of Earth.
An object that weighs 800.1 n on earth would weigh 130.6 n on the moon.
Is your question "what do you weigh different objects on in space...", or "why would you attempt to weigh an object in space"...?