The gravitational field of the neutron star is about 2 x 10^11 times stronger than the gravitational field of earth. However, you have provided a mass in the question and this would remain the same if you were on a neutron star (mass is a scalar quantity - a common mistake). Weight is a vector quantity obtained by mulitplying mass in kg (70 pounds would be about 32kg) by the gravitational field experienced - so a value of 32 x 9.8 = 313.6 N is your weight on earth. Your weight on a neutron star is 2 x 10^11 times bigger than this, so 627.2 x 10^11 N is your weight. Your mass is still 32kg!
If you weigh 80 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 212.8 pounds on Jupiter due to Jupiter's higher gravity.
On Jupiter, your weight would be about 154 pounds. Jupiter's gravity is stronger than Earth's, so objects weigh more on Jupiter compared to Earth.
Assuming the same mass, you would weigh about 169 pounds on Jupiter due to its stronger gravitational pull. Jupiter has a surface gravity of about 2.5 times that of Earth, so if you weigh 63 pounds on Earth, you would weigh more on Jupiter.
If you weighed 42.3 pounds here on Earth you would weigh 100 pounds on Jupiter.
Because Jupiter has a much stronger gravitational pull than Earth, an object that weighs 100 pounds on Earth would weigh approximately 236 pounds on Jupiter.
If you weigh 80 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 212.8 pounds on Jupiter due to Jupiter's higher gravity.
On Jupiter, you would weigh about 501 pounds. This is because Jupiter has a much stronger gravitational pull than Earth, which would make you weigh more if you were on that planet.
On Jupiter, you'd weigh 327.60 pounds.
If you weigh 90 pounds on Jupiter, you would weigh approximately 24.05 pounds on Earth. This is because Jupiter has a stronger gravitational pull than Earth, so objects weigh more on Jupiter compared to Earth.
381 pounds on Jupiter.
WELL YOU WOULD WEIGHED 100 POUNDS ON EARTH YOU WOULD WEIGH 264 POUNDS ON JUPITER
On Jupiter, your weight would be about 154 pounds. Jupiter's gravity is stronger than Earth's, so objects weigh more on Jupiter compared to Earth.
472.8 pounds, approximately. The exact answer depends on the strength of Jupiter's surface gravity and you can find different values from different sources of reference.
Assuming the same mass, you would weigh about 169 pounds on Jupiter due to its stronger gravitational pull. Jupiter has a surface gravity of about 2.5 times that of Earth, so if you weigh 63 pounds on Earth, you would weigh more on Jupiter.
286 pounds
If you weigh 65 pounds on Earth, you would weigh about 154 pounds on Jupiter. This is because Jupiter's gravity is approximately 2.5 times stronger than Earth's. To calculate your weight on Jupiter, you multiply your Earth weight by Jupiter's gravitational factor. Thus, 65 pounds multiplied by 2.5 equals 162.5 pounds.
In Earth if you are 100 pounds you would be 234 pounds in Jupiter.