The mass of an object remains constant regardless of its location, so an object with a mass of 1 kg on Earth still has a mass of 1 kg on Neptune. However, due to Neptune's stronger gravitational pull (approximately 11.15 m/s² compared to Earth's 9.81 m/s²), the weight of that 1 kg object would be greater on Neptune. Weight is the force exerted by gravity on an object, so on Neptune, that 1 kg mass would weigh about 11.15 newtons.
because neptune has more gravity than earth, so, idf you were to go there, the atmosphere of mathane, hydrogen, and helium would puch down on you and you would weigh more.
Neptune Mass: ~1.0*1026 kg Volume: ~6.3*1013 km3
To answer this we must start by taking a look at Neptune's mass. Neptune's mass is about 1.02 x 1026 kg. It would take over 17 Earths to fill up Neptune, but the gravity on Neptune is only 1.19 times of the gravity on Earth. This is because it is such a large planet (and the gravitational force a planet exerts upon an object at the planet's surface is proportional to its mass and to the inverse of its radius squared). A 100-pound person would weigh 112.5 pounds on Neptune. If the object is massive it will gain gravity but if it is large it will lose gravity at a greater rate.
Because they have more mass (m) and a greater diameter (r). g = m/r2You would weigh more on:JupiterNeptunebut less onMercuryVenusMarsSaturnUranus
The mass on Neptune is 50kg although this is only due to mass being gravity independant; assuming you mean it's weight.It's Weight on Neptune would be: 600kg.(weight = mass * g)
The sun is about 19,000 times the mass of Neptune.
The mass of an object remains the same regardless of its location in the universe. So, the mass of an object on Neptune will be the same as its mass on Earth. However, an object's weight, which is the force of gravity acting on it, would differ between Neptune and Earth due to the different gravitational accelerations on the two planets.
Your mass will not but your weight will.
because neptune has more gravity than earth, so, idf you were to go there, the atmosphere of mathane, hydrogen, and helium would puch down on you and you would weigh more.
Neptune Mass: ~1.0*1026 kg Volume: ~6.3*1013 km3
To answer this we must start by taking a look at Neptune's mass. Neptune's mass is about 1.02 x 1026 kg. It would take over 17 Earths to fill up Neptune, but the gravity on Neptune is only 1.19 times of the gravity on Earth. This is because it is such a large planet (and the gravitational force a planet exerts upon an object at the planet's surface is proportional to its mass and to the inverse of its radius squared). A 100-pound person would weigh 112.5 pounds on Neptune. If the object is massive it will gain gravity but if it is large it will lose gravity at a greater rate.
Because they have more mass (m) and a greater diameter (r). g = m/r2You would weigh more on:JupiterNeptunebut less onMercuryVenusMarsSaturnUranus
greater
Assuming the same mass, you would weigh about 55.3 pounds on Neptune due to its stronger gravitational pull compared to Earth.
Strictly speaking you should say "mass" for this sort of question. Anyway Neptune's mass is about 17 times the Earth's mass.
Neptune's diameter is slightly less than four times that of the Earth's Neptune has 17 times the mass If you weigh 180 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 202 pounds at Neptune's cloud tops Neptune is 30 times further from the Sun than the Earth