put it on a scale and whatever number comes up is the weight of the pumpkin.
The weight of an object is the force of gravity acting on it, which is given by the formula: weight = mass x acceleration due to gravity. On Earth, the acceleration due to gravity is approximately 9.81 m/s^2. So, the weight of a 2kg pumpkin on Earth is approximately 2kg x 9.81 m/s^2 = 19.62 N.
it depends what size pumpkin it is. If the pumpkin is one of those small pumpkins chances are it will be 1-3 pounds. But, if it is a large pumpkin, it will probably be around 4-9 pounds. Now, if we are talking about seriously big pumpkins, it could be about 10-17 pounds. Please do not take my word for it, I am not a scientist nor a teacher, but you could just take an educated guess and predict it's in a certain range. If this is for a project, try to guess very smartly because nobody wants to get a bad grade!!
No, 2000 kilograms is an unrealistic estimate for a pumpkin. A more reasonable estimate would be around 5-10 kilograms for a large pumpkin.
The world's largest pumpkin weighed 2,624 pounds.
It would be more appropriate to weigh a pumpkin with a kilogram, as pumpkins generally weigh more than a gram.
Put the apple and pumpkin one by one on the weighing machine and check the weight of the respective apple or pumpkin.
Oz -= Ounces = weight.
350 pounds
4000 lbs In 2012 Ron Wallace had his 2009 pound pumpkin weighed at the Topsfield Fair. Ron grew his record ONE TON pumpkin on the 1725 Harp seed and crossed it with the 1409 Miller.
2
Cost = f(Weight)
I would recomend measuring a pumpkin based on its mass, which can be found by weighing it (not that weight= mass, but weight can be used to determine mass as long as the pumpkin remains on Earth) You could also determine the volume by measuring how much water it displaces. I would stick to mass, though
The amount of pumpkin candies that come in a bag will vary by a few. Bags of candy are sold by weight only.
No metric unit will find the weight of the pumpkin for you. For that, you'll need some kind of a scale. However, once you've found the weight, you'll use a unit of force to describe it. The metric unit of force is the Newton. (NOT the kilogram.)
As of 2013 data, the biggest pumpkin is 2,032 lbs in weight. It was far bigger than the 2012 winner that was 2, 009 lbs.
Since a 15.0 pound pumpkin costs $3.25 that means that it costs $0.22 a pound. You can get that by $3.25/15.0=$0.22 so an 11.4 pound pumpkin will cost $2.51 (11.4x$0.22).
watermelon is Havier than a pumpkin