No..Snow is frozen moisture, which means it was present as water before it became snow, so no change in weight is possible.
More gravity on Earth.
You weigh more on Earth than on Pluto because of the difference in gravitational pull between the two. Earth's gravitational force is much stronger than Pluto's, which causes you to weigh more on Earth.
9.7% less than you weigh on Earth, 138% more than you weigh on Mars.
The 5.0 kg cantaloupe would weigh more on Venus compared to Earth. This is because Venus has a higher gravitational pull than Earth.
The weight of matter on any planet depends upon the gravitational force of that planet. Jupiter has more gravitational force than Earth, so anything (including chocolate) would weigh more there. (Jupiter has no true surface, so you could not weigh anything there.)
near the poles you weigh more
You weigh more on Earth than on Pluto because Earth has a higher gravitational pull than Pluto does.
No; you weigh more on the Earth than you do on the moon.
More gravity on Earth.
You weigh more on Earth than on Pluto because of the difference in gravitational pull between the two. Earth's gravitational force is much stronger than Pluto's, which causes you to weigh more on Earth.
9.7% less than you weigh on Earth, 138% more than you weigh on Mars.
No.
No there is not.
You would weigh less on Mercury than on Earth due to its lower gravity. Mercury's gravity is about 38% of Earth's gravity.
Yes
Mercury does not weigh anything more than earth
The 5.0 kg cantaloupe would weigh more on Venus compared to Earth. This is because Venus has a higher gravitational pull than Earth.