A newton is a unit of force. Please ask another question, clarifying what forces you are talking about.
That's a very low weight; approximately the weight of a small baby. Anyway, gravity on Earth is 9.8 newton/kilogram, gravity on Mercury is 3.7 newton/kilogram. You can write a proportion for that; or else you can first work out the mass, then use this to calculate the weight on Mercury.
The International Space Station orbits Earth at an average altitude of about 250 miles (400 kilometers).
The International Space Station orbits the Earth at an average altitude of about 250 miles (400 kilometers).
First of all, I will tell you the quick and easy way to find the answer. The equation is 9.8 multiplied by 5. You always use the number 9.8 because that is the measurement of Earth's gravity. You use the number 5 because that is the mass of the object you are measuring. That number changes depending on the object's mass. A 5kg backpack would weigh 49 Newtons on Earth. Good luck with science or whatever you needed this for!!
Probably more than ten.
The same 10 kg weighs 16 newtons on the moon, 35.2 newtons on Mars, 98 newtons on earth, and zero newtons while in space coasting from any one of them to either other one.
195 kg of mass weighs 0.312 kilo-newtons on the moon, 0.686 kilo-newtons on Mars, 1.911 kilo-newtons on earth, and zero newtons while coasting at constant speed in space from any one of them to either other.
On earth, two newtons is 0.204kg
400 N at the earth's surface is 40.8kg
1,000 pounds is about 4448 Newtons at Earth's surface.
52 kg is 510 Newtons at Earth's surface.
150lbs is 667.2 Newtons at Earth's surface.
The force of gravity on Earth is approximately 9.81 newtons per kilogram.
The mass of 19.6 Newtons is 1.99 kilograms at the earth's surface.
30 Newtons (force on Earth) equates to approximately 3.1 kg.
A 25kg mass at the earth's surface weighs 25 x 9.8 Newtons = 245 Newtons
On earth, 200N is 20.4kg