The moons gravity is a lot lower than the Earths, so the men exploring the lunar surface will weigh a lot less, roughly 1/6th of what they do on earth.
The weight of Earth is approximately 5.972 × 10^24 kg, and the weight of Venus is roughly 4.867 × 10^24 kg. Therefore, the weight of Earth is greater than the weight of Venus by approximately 1.105 × 10^24 kg.
About 10% less than you do on Earth.
To convert your weight from Earth to Saturn, you would first calculate your weight on Earth using the equation Weight = Mass x Gravity, then divide that weight by Saturn's gravity (which is about 1.08 times that of Earth). This would give you an estimation of how much you would weigh on Saturn.
Elipson is the brightest ring of uranus...
The weight of a space probe on the surface of Jupiter would be significantly greater than its weight on Earth due to Jupiter's strong gravitational pull. Jupiter's gravity is about 24.79 m/s², which is roughly 2.5 times that of Earth's gravity. Therefore, to calculate the weight of the probe on Jupiter, you would multiply its mass by Jupiter's gravitational acceleration. For example, a 1,000 kg probe would weigh approximately 24,790 newtons on Jupiter.
roughly 1/7 of your weight
one forth by jaden
You would have to decide yourself whether it is great or not great for a particular purpose. To give you an idea, that would be roughly the weight of an adult. To get an even better idea, divide the number of newtons by 9.8 - that is the mass which (near Earth's surface) has such a weight.You would have to decide yourself whether it is great or not great for a particular purpose. To give you an idea, that would be roughly the weight of an adult. To get an even better idea, divide the number of newtons by 9.8 - that is the mass which (near Earth's surface) has such a weight.You would have to decide yourself whether it is great or not great for a particular purpose. To give you an idea, that would be roughly the weight of an adult. To get an even better idea, divide the number of newtons by 9.8 - that is the mass which (near Earth's surface) has such a weight.You would have to decide yourself whether it is great or not great for a particular purpose. To give you an idea, that would be roughly the weight of an adult. To get an even better idea, divide the number of newtons by 9.8 - that is the mass which (near Earth's surface) has such a weight.
on the moon it will weigh roughly 1/6 the amount of newtons as it does on earth. So 16.7 on earth would be about 2.8 newtons on the moon.
The weight of Earth is approximately 5.972 × 10^24 kg, and the weight of Venus is roughly 4.867 × 10^24 kg. Therefore, the weight of Earth is greater than the weight of Venus by approximately 1.105 × 10^24 kg.
The main reason is the fact that your weight is proportional to the product of your mass multiplied by the mass of whatever large body you're standing on, and the earth's mass is roughly 80 times as much as the moon's mass..
About 10% less than you do on Earth.
Your weight would be about 6% of what it is on Earth.
To convert your weight from Earth to Saturn, you would first calculate your weight on Earth using the equation Weight = Mass x Gravity, then divide that weight by Saturn's gravity (which is about 1.08 times that of Earth). This would give you an estimation of how much you would weigh on Saturn.
His weight would be approx 1/6 of his weight on earth.
Elipson is the brightest ring of uranus...
In theory, at the center of the Earth you would have no weight.