approximately one sixth
Both rocks would land at the same time because in the absence of air resistance, all objects fall at the same rate regardless of their mass. This is known as the equivalence principle, and it was famously demonstrated by Galileo centuries ago.
The Moon has a mass of about 7.35 x 10^22 kilograms. However, when considering weight, it depends on the gravitational force acting on it, which is typically expressed in Newtons. On Earth, weight is calculated using the formula weight = mass × gravity, but since the Moon is not on Earth, it doesn't have a weight in the conventional sense. Instead, we refer to its mass when discussing its physical properties.
For a constant force, work = force x distance. In other words, just multiply the two. The answer is in joules.
to weigh 1000 newtons the object would have to weigh the equivalent of 100kg Comes from F = ma Force = 1000 newtons = mass x acceleration acceleration = gravity = 10 m/s^2 So Force/acc. = mass = 100 kg
The prefix "deca" means "ten times", so a decanewton is ten newtons.
On earth: 98 newtons (22.1 pounds) On the moon: 16 newtons (3.6 pounds)
A 10-kg mass would weigh 98 newtons (22.05 pounds) on earth, and 16 newtons (3.6 pounds) on the moon.
On the moon, 10 kg of mass weighs 16.2 newtons (3.65 pounds). (rounded)
Because F=mg -> m=F/g On earth g=10 m/sec2 so m1=30/10=3 kg On the Moon g=0.16 m/sec2 so m2=30/0.16=180 kg m2
Both rocks would land at the same time because in the absence of air resistance, all objects fall at the same rate regardless of their mass. This is known as the equivalence principle, and it was famously demonstrated by Galileo centuries ago.
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
The weight of any object is caused by the gravitational field of the nearest, large object. For a 1kg mass on the Earth its weight is about 10 Newtons. On the moon, the same 1kg mass would have a weight of about 2 Newtons.
The same 10 kg weighs 16 newtons on the moon, 35.2 newtons on Mars, 98 newtons on earth, and zero newtons while in space coasting from any one of them to either other one.
10 pounds.
the moon weights 7.3476x 10^22
A force of 9.8 N is the force exerted on a 1 kilogram mass at rest by the force of Earth's gravity at sea level. So 10 N is the force of about a 1.02 kg mass (approximately 2.25 pounds force)This is a scalar measurement.
10 pounds.