The Gravity on the Moon is much weaker than the Gravity on Earth, the Moon's gravity is about 1/6 of the Gravity on Earth. So for example: An Object that weighs 690 N on Earth will weigh 115 N on the moon. In order to get your answer, just divide any number by 6 and you will get your answer.
Answer:
360 N on Earth will result as 60 N on the moon.
An object that weighs 360 newtons (80.99 pounds) on earth
will weigh 58.78 newtons (13.22 pounds) on the moon.
If you assume that the moon's gravity is one sixth of the earth's gravity then the weight will be 360/6 = 60 Newtons.
Without the effects of gravity the person will be weightless.
No. Newtons are a measurement of mass and are relative only to Earth's gravity and are not affected by changes in gravity. Only weight is affected by changing gravity. On Earth, weight and mass are the same because Earth's gravity is the benchmark constant for measuring mass in Newtons, and weight is affected by that very same factor (Earth's gravity). On other planets, mass is unchanged because the Earthly gravity is a constant (and therefore, unchanged), and the weight changes because now it is affected by a new planetary gravity.
81 newtons.
To find your weight on the Moon, we have to divide 9.8 (gravity on the Earth) by 6. That answer has to be multiplied by 85 pounds. that answer is done in newtons as you are finding the weight on the moon. newtons is unit for weight.
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.
Without the effects of gravity the person will be weightless.
Also if you mean Newtons in terms of weight the formula is Newtons = Mass * Gravity
You use the formula weight = mass x gravity. In SI units, the gravity is 9.8 meters per second square, weight is in Newtons, mass is in kilograms.You use the formula weight = mass x gravity. In SI units, the gravity is 9.8 meters per second square, weight is in Newtons, mass is in kilograms.You use the formula weight = mass x gravity. In SI units, the gravity is 9.8 meters per second square, weight is in Newtons, mass is in kilograms.You use the formula weight = mass x gravity. In SI units, the gravity is 9.8 meters per second square, weight is in Newtons, mass is in kilograms.
mass = weight/gravity acceleration = 564N/9.8 m/sec/sec = 57.5 kg
Weight in Newtons.
weight
That depends on gravity. Multiply by the gravitational field to get the weight. For normal Earth gravity, you can multiply by 9.8.
mass*acceleration due to gravity.
Weight = mass x gravity Weight = 50Kg x 9,8 m/s^2 = 490.0 Newtons
The mass of a person cannot be directly determined from their weight. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object, while mass is a measure of the amount of matter an object contains. To calculate the mass of a person, you would need to divide their weight (300 newtons) by the acceleration due to gravity (approximately 9.8 m/s^2).
Weight, mass, pull and Newtons
newtons are how high the gravity of a planet is which relates to measurement of of an object's weight not distance