Mercury's surface gravity is equal to 3.7m/s^2. Thus, an object that weighs 100lbs here on Earth would weigh 37.8lbs on Mercury.
The acceleration of gravity ... and therefor the weight of any object ... on thesurface of Mercury is 37.698% of its value on the surface of Earth. (rounded)
The Statue of Liberty would weigh about 90 tons on Mercury, since weight on Mercury is approximately 38% of weight on Earth.
If you weigh 100lbs on Earth, you would weigh 37.8lbs on Mercury.
Considering that grams are a unit of mass, their mass would still be 100g. If you used a unit of weight, such as pounds, the relative weight of an object would change from planet to planet. On Mercury, a person who weighed 100 lbs normally would instead weigh 38 lbs.
It would still weigh 100lbs, though the gravity on Io would affect its apparent weight so you could lift it like was about an 18 lb weight on earth.
I have been told the approximate weight is 100lbs.
It depends what the object is.
hieght: 5.3 - 5.5 weight: 100lbs - 120lbs
100lbs
around 100lbs
in the book, she says she is under 100lbs.
The acceleration of gravity ... and therefor the weight of any object ... on thesurface of Mercury is 37.698% of its value on the surface of Earth. (rounded)
The 49 Newton object on Earth would have a greater mass than a 49 Newton object on Mercury. This is because weight is a measure of the force of gravity on an object, while mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object. Mercury has a lower gravitational acceleration than Earth, so the same weight would correspond to a lower mass.
100lbs-125lbs
Yes, you can start at any weight.
60-100lbs.
100lbs = 7.1 stone