2652 N and newtons are a measure of force not weight.
Applesauce squared.
The weight of a person is dependent on the gravitational pull of the celestial body they are on. Therefore, if a person weighs 65 pounds on earth, their weight would be different on another planet with a different gravitational force.
This question is incomplete as the last part has been omitted.
The moon has plenty of gravity. In accordance with its mass and radius, any object weighs about 16.5% as much on the moon's surface as it does on the Earth's surface.
Neptune is more massive and therefore weighs more than mercury. Mercury is the smallest planet in our solar system while Neptune is the fourth largest and most massive planet.
Applesauce squared.
On the new planet, Sara would weigh 400 lbs. This is because weight is proportional to the mass of the planet and inversely proportional to the square of the radius. Since the new planet is 5 times larger in radius, the weight would increase by a factor of 5^2 = 25.
The amount of substance of a planet is measured in kilograms, a unit of mass. In this sense, there is no difference between one planet and another. It doesn't make much sense to speak about the "weight" of a planet, but you can measure the attraction between a planet and another object in units of force, i.e., in Newtons.
Mercury
The answer will depend on what the sphere is made of and where it is weighed. But regardless of the substance and the planet it's on, you can always be sure that it weighs (4/3) x (pi) x (Radius)3 x (density of the substance) x (local acceleration of gravity).
Venus would be the closest.
Mars comes the closest.
This is not really a question that can be answered given the wording as it stands. A planet's radius has little or nothing to do with its MASS, which is what 'causes' gravity. For example, Jupiter is far larger than the Earth, but because its' mass is so much less (it's mostly gas, actually) scientists know that Jupiter exerts less gravity than the Earth. And if you had a planet that was smaller than the Earth, but much denser, then you would weigh more there than on the Earth.
The weight of a person is dependent on the gravitational pull of the celestial body they are on. Therefore, if a person weighs 65 pounds on earth, their weight would be different on another planet with a different gravitational force.
Jupiter.
The planet with the highest mass is Jupiter, which is approximately 318 times more massive than Earth.
There is no known planet larger than all the known planets.