Relative to what? On the Earth - 1kg.
The weight of a 1kg object on the surface of the Moon would be approximately 1/6th of its weight on Earth. This means the object would weigh about 0.1667 kg on the Moon due to the Moon's lower gravity compared to Earth's.
The weight of an object is the force exerted on it by gravity. On the Moon, gravity is about 1/6th that of Earth's. Therefore, a 1 kg object would weigh approximately 1.6 newtons on the Moon, compared to about 9.8 newtons on Earth.
The mass is twice as much, so multiply by 2. The radius is 3 times as much--the gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the radius, so multiply by 1/9.2 X 1kg/9 = 0.2 kg.
Your weight is actually (1/6)th in the moon. But, KG is a unit of mass and not weight. Mass remains constant no matter where you are. So, if you're in Mars or Earth or the Moon, you mass remains the same. You weight on the other hand changes due to the force of gravity. Weight is actually the force exerted by the gravity on any substance and KG is not a unit of weight. Units of weight are Newton,Pound, etc. So if your mass is 1KG, your mass will be the same on Moon as well.
Based on surface gravity, your weight on each planet would be: Mercury: 38% of your weight on Earth Venus: 91% of your weight on Earth Mars: 38% of your weight on Earth Jupiter: 236% of your weight on Earth Saturn: 113% of your weight on Earth Uranus: 92% of your weight on Earth Neptune: 113% of your weight on Earth These values are approximate and assume a similar mass and body composition.
9.8 newtons (2.205 pounds) (both rounded)
On earth, 1kg is 9.8 newtons.
The weight of 1 kg is 1 kg on Earth. If the force is to be determined, it is 9.8 Newtons due to gravity.
The weight of a 1kg object on the surface of the Moon would be approximately 1/6th of its weight on Earth. This means the object would weigh about 0.1667 kg on the Moon due to the Moon's lower gravity compared to Earth's.
Neither. Since they both have a weight of 1kg one cannot be heavier than the other.
Fg=mg therefore Fg=(1.0kg)x(9.81m/s^2) Fg=9.81N
Both 1kg of iron and 1kg of cotton would have the same weight in a vacuum. Weight is determined by mass, which is the same for both objects in this scenario.
A 1kg weight would be equivalent to approximately 2.2 pounds, or about the weight of a medium-sized pineapple.
The weight of any object is caused by the gravitational field of the nearest, large object. For a 1kg mass on the Earth its weight is about 10 Newtons. On the moon, the same 1kg mass would have a weight of about 2 Newtons.
Approximately 9.8 Newtons (Force weight = mass * acceleration of gravity)
Yes. Since they both have a weight of 1kg one cannot be heavier than the other.
1kg of gold and 1kg of iron weigh the same amount because they both weigh 1 kilogram. The difference between the two lies in their density and value, not in their weight.