A 5.0kg mass would have the same mass on both Earth and the moon. However, on Mercury, due to its different gravitational pull compared to Earth and the moon, the mass would still be 5.0kg, but it would weigh less on Mercury than on Earth or the moon.
You would weigh approximately 38 pounds on Mercury if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth. This is because Mercury has less mass than Earth, which results in weaker gravitational pull and lower weight of objects compared to Earth.
Not on any planet in this solar system. Mercury has the weakest gravity of any planet in the solar system. A 100 lb person on Earth would weigh 37 lbs on Mercury. That same person would weigh about 17 lbs on the moon, but the moon is not a planet.
Approximately 40 lbs as mercury is about half the size of earth.
Assuming the same mass, you would weigh about 55.3 pounds on Neptune due to its stronger gravitational pull compared to Earth.
Due to Mercury's lower gravity compared to Earth, people would weigh approximately 38% of their weight on Earth.
well, Earth is about 12756 km in diameter, and mercury is about 4880km this makes Earth about 2.6 times bigger than Mercury :) hope that helps
A 5.0kg mass would have the same mass on both Earth and the moon. However, on Mercury, due to its different gravitational pull compared to Earth and the moon, the mass would still be 5.0kg, but it would weigh less on Mercury than on Earth or the moon.
You would weigh approximately 38 pounds on Mercury if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth. This is because Mercury has less mass than Earth, which results in weaker gravitational pull and lower weight of objects compared to Earth.
No. You would would weigh only about 38% of your weight on Earth.
earth and neptune
Not on any planet in this solar system. Mercury has the weakest gravity of any planet in the solar system. A 100 lb person on Earth would weigh 37 lbs on Mercury. That same person would weigh about 17 lbs on the moon, but the moon is not a planet.
The gravitational field is NOT measured in newtons - the newton is a unit of force. Valid units are newtons / kilogram, or the equivalent meters / second2. At its surface, Mercury's gravitational field is 3.7 meters/second2, which is the same as 3.7 newtons/kilogram.
no
No. It would weigh 6.04 times as much on Earth as it weighs on the Moon.
Approximately 40 lbs as mercury is about half the size of earth.
No. An object on Mars would weigh about 38% of what it does on Earth. The _mass_ would be the same, however, so you would be able to lift it easier, but pushing it and stopping it would be the same as on Earth.