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The moon is much smaller than the earth. If you were to weigh yourself on a scale here on earth and then could take that same scale to the moon and weigh yourself there, the weight read on the moon would be 1/6 your earth weight. So, If you weighed 100 pounds on earth, you would weigh only about 16 pounds on the moon.
You would weigh less on Mars compared to Earth due to Mars' lower gravity. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of the gravity on Earth, so a person weighing 100 pounds on Earth would weigh only 38 pounds on Mars.
If you weigh 180 pounds here on Earth, on Venus, you'd weigh 158.04 pounds.
To convert your weight on Earth into your weight on Mars, you have to multiply your weight (in pounds) by 0.38, which is the gravitational pull of Mars in comparison to Earth. As for answering your question, well, the answer depends on what unit you use for 100; pounds or kilograms.If you mean 100 pounds, we do 100 X 0.38 to get a result of 38 pounds. So we come to the conclusion that a person weighing 100 lbs (45 kg) on Earth would weigh 38 lbs (17 kg) on Mars.However, if you mean 100 kilograms, not pounds, then we do the calculation the following way. We convert 100 kg to lbs and get 220 lbs. 220 X 0.38 is approx. 84 kg. So we come to the conclusion that a person weighing 100 kg (220 lbs) on Earth would weigh 84 kg (185 lbs) on Mars.
If you weighed 42.3 pounds here on Earth you would weigh 100 pounds on Jupiter.
The moon is much smaller than the earth. If you were to weigh yourself on a scale here on earth and then could take that same scale to the moon and weigh yourself there, the weight read on the moon would be 1/6 your earth weight. So, If you weighed 100 pounds on earth, you would weigh only about 16 pounds on the moon.
Pluto has 8% of the gravity of earth so if you weigh 100 pounds here you will weigh 8 pounds on Pluto.
A 100 pound person would weigh 4.4852 pounds on Haumea. Flipping things around, if someone weighed 100 pounds on Haumea, they would weigh 2,229.5455 pounds on Earth.
You would weigh less on Mars compared to Earth due to Mars' lower gravity. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of the gravity on Earth, so a person weighing 100 pounds on Earth would weigh only 38 pounds on Mars.
On Mars, you would weigh about 37.8% of your weight on Earth. So if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 38 pounds on Mars.
If he has different weights in different places, then why do you call him a "300 pound person" ? I'm just tweaking you, and trying to make you think a bit. You obviously mean a person "who weighs 300 pounds on Earth". That person would weigh 49.56 pounds on the moon ... of course not counting all the stuff he would have to wear and drag around with him just to stay alive there.
If you weigh 180 pounds here on Earth, on Venus, you'd weigh 158.04 pounds.
The first person here was created by God. I am unsure who the first person was, though. Someone else could probably answer that.
To convert your weight on Earth into your weight on Mars, you have to multiply your weight (in pounds) by 0.38, which is the gravitational pull of Mars in comparison to Earth. As for answering your question, well, the answer depends on what unit you use for 100; pounds or kilograms.If you mean 100 pounds, we do 100 X 0.38 to get a result of 38 pounds. So we come to the conclusion that a person weighing 100 lbs (45 kg) on Earth would weigh 38 lbs (17 kg) on Mars.However, if you mean 100 kilograms, not pounds, then we do the calculation the following way. We convert 100 kg to lbs and get 220 lbs. 220 X 0.38 is approx. 84 kg. So we come to the conclusion that a person weighing 100 kg (220 lbs) on Earth would weigh 84 kg (185 lbs) on Mars.
If you weighed 42.3 pounds here on Earth you would weigh 100 pounds on Jupiter.
If you weighed 100 lb on Earth you would weigh 37.7 lbs on Mars1lb = 0.3775lb = 1.88510lb = 3.7725lb = 9.42550lb = 18.85100lb = 37.7150lb = 56.55200lb = 75.4500lb = 188.5Or multiply x 0.377
Gravity on Jupiter is 2.364 that of earth. So at 84 pounds you would weigh 198.576 pounds there.