That's a very low weight; approximately the weight of a small baby. Anyway, gravity on Earth is 9.8 newton/kilogram, gravity on Mercury is 3.7 newton/kilogram. You can write a proportion for that; or else you can first work out the mass, then use this to calculate the weight on Mercury.
It would weight 1/6 of what it weighs on Earth. The weight, of course, would depend on the exact bottle. For example, a 2-liter bottle has a mass of about 2 kg, and would weigh 20 Newtons on Earth. On the Moon, it would weigh a little over 3 Newtons.
Mercury Is 0.000131 lightyears away from earth
Two, Mercury and Venus.2, mercury and venus
There are no stars between the earth and the moon. ** If there were, Earth would be as barren and lifeless as Mercury.
862.4 N m/s squared
1 kg of mass weighs 9.81 newtons on Earth and 3.7 newtons on Mercury.
1 pound is 4.448N (at earth's surface).
On earth, 1 kilogram of mass weighs 9.8 newtons.
On Earth, 372 newtons is the weight of 37.932 kilograms of mass. In other places, it's the weight of different amounts of mass.
100 kg equates to about 980.665 Newtons of force on Earth.
On Earth, 10 kilograms of mass weighs 90.81 newtons. (rounded) In other places, the same mass has different weight.
Mass is measured in kilograms and force is measured in newtons. On Earth the force F = 1 newton has roughly the mass m = 0.102 kilograms. 20 newtons are 2.04 kilograms.
On earth, two newtons is 0.204kg
At Earth's surface 100lbs is 444.82 Newtons.
150lbs is 667.2 Newtons at Earth's surface.
A minimum of 1.667 newtons.
400 N at the earth's surface is 40.8kg