They both have the same MASS no matter where they are. On Earth it will weigh more because of greater gravity. MASS is a measure of the amount of stuff there is. WEIGHT is a measure of how much gravity is pulling on it.
If you weigh 115 pounds on earth, your mass is 52.2 kilograms. If you weigh 125 pounds on the moon, your mass is 319.5 kilograms.
Size: The Moon has about 1/4 of the diameter of Earth. Mass: The Moon has about 1/81 of the mass of Earth.
2,009 grams of mass weigh 11.57 ounces on the moon, 1.591 pounds on Mars, and 4.429 pounds on the earth.
Both rocks would land at the same time because in the absence of air resistance, all objects fall at the same rate regardless of their mass. This is known as the equivalence principle, and it was famously demonstrated by Galileo centuries ago.
people weigh less on the moon that's why astronauts wear heavy equipment ======================================================= Weight, unlike mass, is affected by gravity. As the Moon's gravity is approximately one sixth the Earth's, a person on the Moon would weigh one sixth of what they weigh on Earth. Their mass, however, would stay the same.
The moon has 1/6th the gravity of the Earth. If something weighed 60 pounds on Earth it would weigh ten pounds on the Moon. The mass of the object would not change, as mass is the measurement of how much stuff you are.
Every mass has gravity. If you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, then you would weigh about 16 pounds on the moon.
Kg is mass. Mass is the same everywhere. If you convert 2.45 kg is 5.40 pounds weight at Earth's sea level. 5.40 pounds on Earth would be 0.882 pounds on the moon
Your weight on the moon is about 16.55% of your weight on Earth. If you weigh 200 pounds on Earth, then you'll weigh 33.1 pounds on the moon. Plus, of course, your space suit and all the rest of the gear you have to wear in order to survive on the moon.
1 earth mass = 81.78 moon mass (rounded)1 moon mass = 0.01223 earth mass = 1.223% of earth mass (rounded)The mass of the moon is only 1.2 percent of the mass of Earth.
No. The mass of the moon is a fraction of the earth's mass.
On earth, any mass of 85 kg weighs 833 newtons (187.4 pounds). On the moon, the same mass weighs 136 newtons (30.6 pounds)
A person with a mass of 80 kg weighs 176.4 pounds on earth, 28.8 pounds on the moon, and 66.9 pounds on Mars. (all rounded)
No, your mass remains exactly the same. It is gravity that changes. The moon has about 1/6 the gravity of the surface of the earth, so you weigh about 1/6 as much. For example, a person who has a mass of 60 kg weighs about 132 pounds on earth, or about 22 pounds on the moon, but the mass remains 60 kg.
The 'kilogram' is the SI (metric) unit of mass.24 kg is the mass of an object.The object weighs 52.9 pounds on earth, and 8.64 pounds on the moon.
Anything is about 17 percent its Earth weight if on the moon. For example, if 60 pounds on Earth, it is 10 pounds on the moon. Mass of two objects that are near each other causes weight, so the bigger the objects, the more the force of gravity.
Your mass remains constant regardless of your location, whether on Earth or the Moon, because mass is a measure of the amount of matter in your body. However, your weight changes because weight is the force exerted by gravity on that mass. The Moon's gravitational pull is about 1/6th that of Earth's, so you would weigh significantly less on the Moon, even though your mass stays the same. For example, if you weigh 180 pounds on Earth, you would weigh only about 30 pounds on the Moon.