Heavy is not a term used in astronomy as an object in space has no weight.
It does have, however, mass.
See related question.
The planet Mars has a mass of 6.4185×1023kilograms, or just over one-tenth the mass of Earth.
the wieght of mars is 0.0g
2 kilos
On Mars, you weigh 37.7% as much as you would on Earth. If you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you weigh only 37.7 pounds on Mars. If you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you weigh only 56.6 pounds. The equation is .37 x Earth weight = Martian weight.
76 pounds or 38% of Earth weight.
On Mars, you'd weigh 51.30 pounds.
About 38 pounds.
1/3 of your weight on Earth.
500 kg
If you weigh 110 lbs on earth, you would weigh 41.8 lbs on Mars because Mars has 38% of the gravitational pull that the earth has.
The answer depends on the person's weight on Earth but each pound's weight on Earth would be equivalent to 0.376 pound's weight on Mars.
You would weigh 95.24 lbs
On Mars, you weigh 37.7% as much as you would on Earth. If you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you weigh only 37.7 pounds on Mars. If you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you weigh only 56.6 pounds. The equation is .37 x Earth weight = Martian weight.
86.71 Pounds
To keep it simple weight is about 40% of earth weight on Mars. 0.4 * 330 pounds = 132 pounds ==========
It weighs about 14 - 16 lbs.
76 pounds or 38% of Earth weight.
You need to:1) Divide the weight by Earth's gravity, to get the mass. 2) Remember that the mass will be the same on Mars. 3) Multiply the mass by the gravity of Mars, to get the weight on Mars.
You divide your current weight by 2.65625. Hence, if your weight is 170 lbs. you would weigh 64 lbs. on Mars because 170/2.65625=64.
On Mars, you'd weigh 51.30 pounds.