The helmet weighs 0.18 kilograms on the moon or 1.08 kg on Earth.
the moon weighs 3,578,348,365 lbs
The moon has plenty of gravity. In accordance with its mass and radius, any object weighs about 16.5% as much on the moon's surface as it does on the Earth's surface.
Your weight is a function (G=mg) of the gravitational pull (g) and the mass of the object in question (m). The mass of the Moon is only 1/6 that of Earth, so the astronaut on the Moon weighs only 1/6th as much as he does on Earth. His mass does not change.
If a man weighs 60kg on Earth he would weigh 9.9kg on the moon.
No, they do not have the same mass. The moon has much less mass than Earth.
the moon weighs 3,578,348,365 lbs
The moon has plenty of gravity. In accordance with its mass and radius, any object weighs about 16.5% as much on the moon's surface as it does on the Earth's surface.
It depends on where you're weighing it. -- Something that weighs 185 pounds on Earth has 83.915 kilograms of mass. -- Something that weighs 185 pounds on the moon has 507.056 kilograms of mass. -- Something that weighs 185 pounds on Jupiter has 31.793 kilograms of mass.
The moon has plenty of gravity. In accordance with its mass and radius, any object weighs about 16.5% as much on the moon's surface as it does on the Earth's surface.
An object whose mass is 120 milligrams has the same mass wherever it is ... whether on earth,on the moon, on Jupiter, or in space on the way. Mass doesn't change.What changes is the weight of that mass. The weight is the result of the gravitational attractionbetween that little mass and whatever other mass happens to be nearby.On earth, 120 mg of mass weighs about about 0.00176 newton (0.000265 pound).On the moon, 120 mg of mass weighs about 0.000192 newton (0.0000432 pound).
On earth, a mass of 3,010 grams weighs 29.498 newtons (6.636 pounds). (rounded) On the moon, the same 3,010 grams of mass weighs 4.816 newtons (1.083 pounds). (rounded)
Your weight is a function (G=mg) of the gravitational pull (g) and the mass of the object in question (m). The mass of the Moon is only 1/6 that of Earth, so the astronaut on the Moon weighs only 1/6th as much as he does on Earth. His mass does not change.
'Kg' is a unit of mass, not weight. On Earth, 1 kg of mass weighs 9.8 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.102 kg of mass. On the moon, the same kg of mass weighs 1.6 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.616 kg of mass. On Mars, the same kg of mass weighs 3.7 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.269 kg of mass.
On the moon, any object weighs about 16% as much as it weighs when it's on the earth.
If a man weighs 60kg on Earth he would weigh 9.9kg on the moon.
No, your mass remains exactly the same. It is gravity that changes. The moon has about 1/6 the gravity of the surface of the earth, so you weigh about 1/6 as much. For example, a person who has a mass of 60 kg weighs about 132 pounds on earth, or about 22 pounds on the moon, but the mass remains 60 kg.
the atomic mass is how much an element weighs