Yes your weight would be greater.
Yes, in a way. If the radius of the Earth decreased but it's mass stayed the same, then the forces "pulling" on you (weight) would increase and you would be heavier. If the radius of the Earth increased and the mass stayed the same, then you would be lighter. You would actually weigh less on the top of Mount Everest than on the beach of Honolulu. BTW: This is not a good idea for a weight loss program.
If Earth had twice its current mass, your weight would also double, assuming you remained at the same distance from the Earth's center. Weight is directly proportional to the mass of the planet, so an increase in Earth's mass leads to an increase in gravitational force exerted on objects. This means that all objects, including yourself, would experience greater weight due to the stronger gravitational pull.
Your weight on the sun would be much greater than on Earth due to its stronger gravitational pull. The sun's gravity is about 28 times stronger than Earth's, so you would weigh approximately 3500lbs on the sun.
On Titan you would weight about 18% of your weight on Earth.
You weight on the moon is 16.5% of what your weight is on Earth.
It would be greater.
It would be greater.
It would be greater.
You'r weight would be greater because the more mass the greater the gravitational pull which is what causes weight in the first place
On a larger planet, such as Jupiter or Saturn.
If you're the same distance from the center of the planet but its mass is greater than earth's mass, then the mutual gravitational force between you and that planet is greater than on earth, and you'll "weigh" more than you do here.
earth, because earth has a greater gravitational pull
Your weight is directly proportional to the mass and gravity of the planet, if the planet has a greater gravity and mass, you will weigh more.
If the planet were the same size as Earth but its mass were some percent greater than Earth's mass, then your weight there would be that same percent greater than it is on Earth. A bathroom scale on that planet might not read exactly the number that I have described ... your apparent weight, as displayed by a bathroom scale, would also be influenced somewhat by the planet's rate of rotation, which might be something different from 15° per Earth-hour of time.
Weight is greater on earth than in space due to gravity.
It would be greater in proportion to the difference in mass. The force of gravity is proportional to the product of the 2 masses, and yours didn't change.
Your weight is directly proportional to the mass and gravity of the planet, if the planet has a greater gravity and mass, you will weigh more.