On Earth, 10 kg of mass weighs 98.1 newtons (22.05 pounds). (rounded)
Kg is mass. Mass is the same everywhere. If you convert 2.45 kg is 5.40 pounds weight at Earth's sea level. 5.40 pounds on Earth would be 0.882 pounds on the moon
The weight of a 2.45 kg mass on Earth can be calculated using the formula: weight = mass x acceleration due to gravity. On Earth, the average acceleration due to gravity is approximately 9.81 m/s^2. Therefore, the weight of a 2.45 kg mass on Earth is approximately 24 N (Newtons).
The mass of an object remains constant regardless of location, so the mass on the moon remains 8 kg. The weight on the moon can be calculated using the formula: Weight = mass * acceleration due to gravity. Given that the acceleration due to gravity on the moon is 1/6th that of Earth, the weight on the moon would be 1/6th of the weight on Earth, which is 10 N (60 N * 1/6).
The weight of a 90-kg astronaut on Earth would be approximately 882.9 Newtons (N). This is calculated by multiplying the astronaut's mass (90 kg) by the acceleration due to gravity on Earth (9.81 m/s^2).
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.
10 kilograms is the mass. To calculate the weight (in newtons), multiply the mass by 9.8.
Mass (kg) x Gravitational Field Strength (Gravity) (N/kg) = Weight (N)GFS on earth = 10 N/kg
To get the weight (in Newton), multiply the mass by Earth's gravitation - about 9.8, in SI units.
The weight of an object is given as the formula W=mg where W is the weight, m is the mass and g is the gravitational acceleration (or the gravity of planet). On earth, g is generalized as 10 N kg-1(about 9.8 N kg-1 to be more exact). On the moon, it is about 10/6 N kg-1. So, the weight of a 10kg mass on earth would be 100 N (N is Newton, the SI unit for weight) while the mass would be 16.7 N on the moon.
50 Kg of course !
98 Newtons.
10kg equals 100N On Earth, weight is mass multiplied by 10. So If I was 45kg, I would be 450N. Weight changes according to gravity, so on other planets you would weigh differently, but still have the same 10kg mass. Hope that this helped. ^Wrong. You multiply by 9.8 not 10. This is because of gravity on earth.
'Kg' is a unit of mass, not weight. On Earth, 1 kg of mass weighs 9.8 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.102 kg of mass. On the moon, the same kg of mass weighs 1.6 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.616 kg of mass. On Mars, the same kg of mass weighs 3.7 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.269 kg of mass.
If a student had a mass of 195 kg, then his weight on earth was 1,911 newtons, or about 430 pounds.
The mass of an object can be calculated using the formula: mass = weight/gravity. In this case, if the weight is 98 N and gravity is approximately 9.81 m/s^2 on Earth, the mass would be approximately 10 kg.
The weight of a 14-kilogram mass would be approximately 137.2 Newtons on Earth (using the acceleration due to gravity of 9.81 m/s²). Weight is a force that is the product of mass and gravitational acceleration.
10 kg of mass weighs -- 22.05 pounds (98.1 newtons) on earth -- 3.6 pounds (16.2 newtons) on the moon -- 8.38 pounds (37.3 newtons) on Mercury