The higher you go the less effect gravity has on you.
The acceleration of gravity at its surface is currently estimated as 0.4 m/s2 .That's about 4% of the acceleration of gravity on the Earth's surface.
According to the Google search "kg to lbs", 1 kilogram = 2.20462262 pounds . . . on the surface of the earth.
Yes. Weight is the gravitational force X the mass of an object. The further away from the center of the earth, the less the gravitational force. So you would weigh more at sea level than you would on top of Mt. Everest.
Yes, sea water does weigh more at depth than at the surface due to the increased pressure exerted by the water column above it. This pressure causes the water molecules to be more densely packed together, resulting in a higher weight per unit volume.
The weight of a mountain can vary greatly depending on its size, composition, and elevation. However, mountains can weigh billions or even trillions of tons due to the massive amount of rock and sediment they are made of.
Because the mountain is farther away from the gravitational centre of the Earth.
Because the mountain is farther away from the gravitational centre of the Earth.
Both mercury and mars have a gravity which is around 38% of earths. Mercury's gravity is 37.8% of earths, Mars' gravity is 37.7% of earths.
the moon is 1/6th the earths gravity so 6 goes into 104 ... 17.33 so if u r using an earths scale - you would weigh 17.33 lbs
38 lb
On Uranus, a person weighing 100 pounds on Earth would weigh approximately 89 pounds. This is due to the lower surface gravity on Uranus compared to Earth. The surface gravity on Uranus is about 0.89 times that of Earth, so a person's weight would be reduced accordingly.
About 0.183g, where one g is the earths gravity, so about one fifth of the earths gravity. It is similar to our own moons surface gravity.
10 pounds
A 150 pound person would weigh 179 pounds on Neptune. The surface gravity on Neptune is 119% of Earth's surface gravity.
Mars has about 38% of Earth's gravity, meaning that objects on Mars weigh less than they do on Earth. For example, if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh about 38 pounds on Mars.
they weigh about 497 pounds.
Presuming a 108 pound person could find something to stand on at the "surface" of Saturn, and could survive there long enough to be weighed, that person would weigh about 115 pounds.