The Moon's gravity is approximately 1/6 that of Earth's, so if you don't include all of the equipment you would need to survive on the surface (outside the spacecraft), you would weigh approximately 8.3 kilograms.
A man that weighs 60 kg on Earth would weigh less on the moon. He would weigh 9.9 kg on the moon.
81 newtons.
No. It will weigh 110.32 pounds on Earth, and 18.24 pounds on the moon.
The weight of a 100kg man on the moon would be approximately 16.5kg, because the moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity.
Your mass remains the same, which is 50 kg, regardless of the celestial body you are on. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on your mass, so your weight on the moon would be about 1/6th of your weight on Earth due to the moon's weaker gravity.
A man that weighs 60 kg on Earth would weigh less on the moon. He would weigh 9.9 kg on the moon.
81 newtons.
81 newtons.
81 newtons.
No. It will weigh 110.32 pounds on Earth, and 18.24 pounds on the moon.
Mass is a measurement of how much matter exists in the body you're measuring.The amount of matter in you doesn't change on the moon, so you would still have a mass of 50 kg.What does change on the moon is your weight, which is a unit of force, not mass.The weight would be 1/6th of what it is on earth (about 8.3kg)
The weight of a 100kg man on the moon would be approximately 16.5kg, because the moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity.
From Wikipedia, the gravitational acceleration on the Moon (on its equator) is 1.622 m/s2. This is the same as 1.622 N/kg, so you can multiply the mass by this number to get the weight in Newton. (The man's mass, of course, will still be 70 kg on the Moon. His weight will change, but his mass will not change.)
half of his original weight say he was 100 kg he would be 50kg on the moon
The kilogram is a measure of mass, not a measure of force. His mass will remain the same (i.e. 60kg) regardless of the gravitational field he is in. But as the moon has a weaker gravitational field than the Earth the bathroom scales that stopped at 60 on the Earth will stop at 10 on the Moon.
For an average man it accounts to about 12% of his body weight...ie a 50 kg person can have 6 kg of fat in his body.
The weight of a body depends upon the force of gravity acting upon that body. A 50 kg body will have a weight that is 50 times that of a 1 kg mass. The weight of the body will be different on earth, on the moon and in deep space (zero).