About 35 pounds.
If you weigh 90 pounds on Earth, you would still weigh 90 pounds on Earth. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on an object, so it remains constant regardless of the location on Earth.
Equatorial surface gravity on Jupiter is 2.528 time that of earth, so a 50lb person on earth would weigh 126.4 lbs
You weigh 1/6 what you do on earth when youre on the moon.
Your weight on the moon would be about 1/6th of your weight on Earth. So, if you weigh 40kg on Earth, on the moon you would weigh approximately 6.67kg.
The moon is 1/4 the size of Earth, so the moon's gravity is much less than the earth's gravity, 83.3% (or 5/6) less to be exact. So take your weight and multiply it by .167 and that is how much you would weigh on the moon.
the same
Your weight depends on the distance from the center of Earth. Weight decreases with distance from Earth's center, so if you are 50,000 miles away, you would weigh less than 40.0 pounds when compared to being 100,000 miles away. The exact weight can be determined using the inverse square law of gravitation.
No. On Mercury you would weigh 37% of what you weigh on Earth.
You would weigh 102 lb.
No. You would would weigh only about 38% of your weight on Earth.
If you weighed 196 lbs on Earth, you would weigh 177.7 lbs in Venus.
you would way 1 pound if you weigh 15 pounds on earth
35K Feet = 10.668 KM Atmosphere = 560 KM Airplane at 35,000 feet would be above approximately 1.9% of the earth's atmosphere.
Depending on your definition, the descent to earth from space would be about 60 miles long if you were to consider "space" to start at 60 miles above sea-level.
If you weigh 1,001 lbs on Earth you would weigh 378.3 lbs on Mercury.
You would weigh about 37.8 lbs
If you weighed 30lb on Earth you would weigh a mere 2lb.