Mass does not change when an object is on the Moon; it remains constant regardless of location. However, weight, which is the force exerted by gravity on an object, does change due to the Moon's weaker gravitational pull. An object weighs about one-sixth of its weight on Earth when measured on the Moon. Therefore, while mass remains the same, weight decreases significantly due to the Moon's lower gravity.
An astronaut's mass remains constant regardless of location, as mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object. However, their weight will change on the Moon due to its weaker gravitational pull, which is about one-sixth that of Earth's. This means the astronaut will weigh significantly less on the Moon, even though their mass stays the same. For example, if an astronaut weighs 180 pounds on Earth, they would weigh only about 30 pounds on the Moon.
The moon has 1/6th the gravity of the Earth. If something weighed 60 pounds on Earth it would weigh ten pounds on the Moon. The mass of the object would not change, as mass is the measurement of how much stuff you are.
Your mass remains the same, which is 50 kg, regardless of the celestial body you are on. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on your mass, so your weight on the moon would be about 1/6th of your weight on Earth due to the moon's weaker gravity.
The mass of an object remains the same regardless of its location because mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, which does not change. Gravity affects the weight of an object, not its mass, so an object will have the same mass on the Moon as it does on Earth, but it will weigh less on the Moon due to the Moon's lower gravitational pull.
-- Your mass doesn't change. No matter where you go, mass is what you bring with you. -- If you take your mass to the Moon, it will weigh about 16.5% as much as it weighs on Earth. If you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 24 pounds 13.2 ounces on the moon. In between ... on the way there, comfy and coasting in your space capsule on the way from the Earth to the Moon, you would weigh zero, and you would float around in the space capsule. Unless you snugged a loop of your shoelace around a hook on the wall in order to get some sleep.
If your mass is 120 kg, then you weigh about 1,177 N on Earth, and about 195 N on the moon. Your mass doesn't change, no matter where you are.
Your mass remains constant regardless of your location, whether on Earth or the Moon, because mass is a measure of the amount of matter in your body. However, your weight changes because weight is the force exerted by gravity on that mass. The Moon's gravitational pull is about 1/6th that of Earth's, so you would weigh significantly less on the Moon, even though your mass stays the same. For example, if you weigh 180 pounds on Earth, you would weigh only about 30 pounds on the Moon.
An astronaut's mass remains constant regardless of location, as mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object. However, their weight will change on the Moon due to its weaker gravitational pull, which is about one-sixth that of Earth's. This means the astronaut will weigh significantly less on the Moon, even though their mass stays the same. For example, if an astronaut weighs 180 pounds on Earth, they would weigh only about 30 pounds on the Moon.
The moon has 1/6th the gravity of the Earth. If something weighed 60 pounds on Earth it would weigh ten pounds on the Moon. The mass of the object would not change, as mass is the measurement of how much stuff you are.
Your mass remains the same, which is 50 kg, regardless of the celestial body you are on. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on your mass, so your weight on the moon would be about 1/6th of your weight on Earth due to the moon's weaker gravity.
1 kg mass would weigh about 167 grams on the moon.
Nothing at all
the total mass of the moon is, 73,483,000,000,000,000,000,000 kg.
The Moon has a mass of 161,649,400,000,000,000,000,000 pounds.
From Wikipedia, the gravitational acceleration on the Moon (on its equator) is 1.622 m/s2. This is the same as 1.622 N/kg, so you can multiply the mass by this number to get the weight in Newton. (The man's mass, of course, will still be 70 kg on the Moon. His weight will change, but his mass will not change.)
You weigh less when the moon is overhead because the gravitational pull from the moon resists Earth's gravitational pull slightly. But remember, your mass has not changed. Mass is the amount of matter within an object, weight is the force action upon that mass. The two are not the same. +++ The weight change would be extremely small though.
The mass of an object remains the same regardless of its location because mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, which does not change. Gravity affects the weight of an object, not its mass, so an object will have the same mass on the Moon as it does on Earth, but it will weigh less on the Moon due to the Moon's lower gravitational pull.