Depends on the sizeof the person, but:
100 earth pounds = 9 Eris pounds.
On Eris, a dwarf planet in our solar system, your weight would be significantly different than on Earth due to its lower gravity. Eris has a surface gravity of about 0.8 m/s^2, which is only about 0.083 times the gravity on Earth. Therefore, if you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 12.45 pounds on Eris. This calculation is based on the formula Weight on Eris = Weight on Earth * (Surface gravity of Eris / Surface gravity of Earth).
472.8 pounds, approximately. The exact answer depends on the strength of Jupiter's surface gravity and you can find different values from different sources of reference.
You would weigh about 1/6 as much on the moon as you weigh on earth if you were not wearing heavy equipment. I would weigh about 560 ounces on the moon.
No. Eris is much to far away to send astronauts there. We have not even sent any probes there. The only object astronauts have visited is the moon, which is much closer to Earth than any other object in space.
It would weigh 10kg.
On Eris, a dwarf planet in our solar system, your weight would be significantly different than on Earth due to its lower gravity. Eris has a surface gravity of about 0.8 m/s^2, which is only about 0.083 times the gravity on Earth. Therefore, if you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 12.45 pounds on Eris. This calculation is based on the formula Weight on Eris = Weight on Earth * (Surface gravity of Eris / Surface gravity of Earth).
If you weighed 60lbs on Earth you'd weigh 63.8lb on Saturn.
if you weigh a 100 lbs, on mercury you will weigh 38 lbs. just multiply your answer by 0.38.
Eris isn't a dwarf sun. If it were, it would be much heavier, and would have a much stronger gravitational field, which would be easily noticeable by its effects on the orbits of other objects in the solar system.
4 to 1 unless it is a muscle pup.
A lot.
2kg
12323grams
5lb
2kg
472.8 pounds, approximately. The exact answer depends on the strength of Jupiter's surface gravity and you can find different values from different sources of reference.
50 gm