Without the effects of gravity the person will be weightless.
0.0 newtons
If a woman's mass is 60 kg, then she weighs about 588 newtons (132.3 pounds) on the Earth, 97 newtons (21.9 pounds) on the moon, and zero while her ship is coasting or orbiting in space. Her mass of 60 kg never changes, no matter where she is, but that mass has different weights in different places.
The weight of the International Space Station is essentially zero in space since weight is a measurement of the force of gravity acting on an object. It is constantly in freefall around Earth, so it experiences microgravity.
On the Moon: The weight of a 53 kg astronaut on the Moon would be approximately 212 N, based on the acceleration due to gravity on the Moon (1.6 m/s^2). On Mars: The weight of a 53 kg astronaut on Mars would be approximately 199 N, based on the acceleration due to gravity on Mars (3.7 m/s^2). In outer space traveling at a constant velocity: In the absence of gravity in outer space, the astronaut would experience weightlessness and have no weight, even while traveling at a constant velocity.
In Outer Space was created in 1983.
0.0 newtons
0.0 newtons
NO
The weight of 151 kilograms depends on the force of gravity at that point. In outer space it will be close to 0, while on a neutron star it will be a very large number of Newtons.
no
19.6 newtons when the experiment is performed on the earth. 3.2 newtons on the moon, 7.04 newtons on Mercury, zero while coasting in any space vehicle.
If a woman's mass is 60 kg, then she weighs about 588 newtons (132.3 pounds) on the Earth, 97 newtons (21.9 pounds) on the moon, and zero while her ship is coasting or orbiting in space. Her mass of 60 kg never changes, no matter where she is, but that mass has different weights in different places.
weight.
Your weight Oxygen level
buzz Aldrin and neil Armstrong were the major astronauts
Yes, weight depends on the gravity of the planet. The weight of an object is different on a planet with a different gravity. An object has zero weight in outer space. No! An object does not have zero weight in outer space. Why? Because gravity exists in outer space.
A pound is a unit of mass. Mass is constant throughout the cosmos, so if the astronaut has a MASS of 180 pounds on Earth, it will be the same even in space. But, the astronaut doesn't have a weight of 180 pounds. His MASS is 180 pounds. Weight = mass x gravity. So, in space, his weight is 0 Newtons.