What is "a one hundred pound object" ? That's a peculiar label to put on anything,
since we know that the same object has different weights in different places ...
you know that too, or you wouldn't be asking the question.
I can only assume that you're calling it a "one hundred pound object" because
it weighs 100 pounds when it's on the surface of the Earth.
If that's true, then it becomes a "106.5 pound object" on Saturn.
A person weighing 95 pounds on Earth would weigh approximately 100 pounds on Saturn, due to Saturn's stronger gravitational pull.
Well, aren't we getting all interplanetary here? A 125-pound person on Earth would weigh about 134 pounds on Saturn. Why? Because Saturn's gravity is stronger than Earth's, so it would make you feel a bit heavier. But hey, at least you'd have some killer views of those rings while you weigh yourself down!
1000,0000,00000,00000,00000,000000,00000 times as much you would weigh on planet earth
To calculate the weight of a 70.9-pound person on Saturn, we need to consider Saturn's gravity, which is about 1.065 times that of Earth's. Therefore, the weight on Saturn would be approximately 70.9 pounds multiplied by 1.065, resulting in a weight of about 75.5 pounds.
They would have about 160 x 1.065 pounds weight. That's about 170.4 pounds weight. That's because the surface gravity of Saturn is about 1.065 times the Earth's. However there is some disagreement over the exact strength of Saturn's gravity. It depends a bit on the definition. The number I have used is roughly in the middle of different values you can find.
A 100-pound object on Earth would weigh significantly less on Titan, Saturn's largest moon, due to its lower gravity. Titan's surface gravity is about 14% that of Earth's. Therefore, a 100-pound object would weigh approximately 14 pounds on Titan.
If you weighed 60lbs on Earth you'd weigh 63.8lb on Saturn.
A person weighing 95 pounds on Earth would weigh approximately 100 pounds on Saturn, due to Saturn's stronger gravitational pull.
The weigh the same. A pound is a pound is a pound no matter what the object is.
A 5 pound rock on Earth would weigh 5.3 pounds on Saturn. This is because Saturn's gravity is slightly stronger than the pull on Earth.
Well, aren't we getting all interplanetary here? A 125-pound person on Earth would weigh about 134 pounds on Saturn. Why? Because Saturn's gravity is stronger than Earth's, so it would make you feel a bit heavier. But hey, at least you'd have some killer views of those rings while you weigh yourself down!
1000,0000,00000,00000,00000,000000,00000 times as much you would weigh on planet earth
No, not strong enough to weigh a 50 pound object.
To calculate the weight of a 70.9-pound person on Saturn, we need to consider Saturn's gravity, which is about 1.065 times that of Earth's. Therefore, the weight on Saturn would be approximately 70.9 pounds multiplied by 1.065, resulting in a weight of about 75.5 pounds.
They would weigh approximately 38 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.
They would have about 160 x 1.065 pounds weight. That's about 170.4 pounds weight. That's because the surface gravity of Saturn is about 1.065 times the Earth's. However there is some disagreement over the exact strength of Saturn's gravity. It depends a bit on the definition. The number I have used is roughly in the middle of different values you can find.