A person with a mass of 70 kg would weigh approximately 686 Newtons on Earth.
If Earth had twice its current mass, the gravitational force would increase, and objects would weigh twice as much as they do now. This means that a person weighing 150 pounds on Earth would weigh 300 pounds on the hypothetical Earth with double the mass. The weight change would be a direct result of the increase in gravitational pull due to the added mass.
Mercury has a mass of about 0.055 times that of Earth, making it relatively light compared to our planet. Astronomers estimate its weight by comparing it to Earth's gravity, which would make a 150-pound person weigh approximately 57 pounds on Mercury.
259N is the person weigh on mercury.
weight on jupiter=((mass of jupiter)*(Radius of earth)2/(mass of earth)*(Radius of jupiter)2)*weight on earth
A kilogram is a measure of mass, not of weight. A person whose mass is 285 pounds will weigh 1267 Newtons.
The Moon is much smaller than the Earth, and its Mass is much less. Thus the pull of gravity is much less on the Moon.Therefore, you would weigh less on the Moon than on Earth, even though your Mass would be the same.
A kilogram is a measure of mass, not of weight. A person whose mass is 117 pounds will weigh 520 Newtons.
Mercury does not weigh anything more than earth
That would depend on the planet's radius. The strength of gravity depends on both the mass of the object in question and the distance from its center of mass. If the planet in question had the same radius as Earth, then the person would weigh 200 lbs as gravity would be twice as strong. If the planet had the same density as Earth it would have 1.26 times Earth's radius and gravity would be 1.26 times as strong and the person would weigh 126 lbs. If the planet had about 1.41 times Earth's radius then that person's would weight 100 lbs.
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.
A single object doesn't have a gravitational attraction. The gravitational force between two objects is proportional to the product of both of their masses. So the force between the earth and any other object ... like a person ... depends on the mass of the person, just as much as it depends on the earth's mass. You can't tell the strength of the earth's attraction of an object until you know the object's mass. (In other words, you don't know how much a person on earth will weigh until you know something about the person.)
If Earth had twice its current mass, the gravitational force would increase, and objects would weigh twice as much as they do now. This means that a person weighing 150 pounds on Earth would weigh 300 pounds on the hypothetical Earth with double the mass. The weight change would be a direct result of the increase in gravitational pull due to the added mass.
Weight = mass x gravitational field strength gravitational field strength on Mars 3.7N/kg (On Earth 9.8N/kg) (therefore factor difference between Mars and Earth 3.7/9.8 = 0.38) A person who weighs 600N or Earth (mass approx 61kg) will weigh 227N on Mars.
A person weighing 180 pounds on Earth would weigh 30 pounds on the moon.
Weight is a function of gravity and mass. On Earth, the weight of a person is gauged by a scale, of the mass of that person and the amount of gravity pulling that person towards the centre of the Earth. On the Moon, with the same person and scales, that person would weight 1/6th they do on Earth, because the Moon has 1/6th the gravity of the Earth. So the Sun, has nothing pulling on it, so it can be said to weigh nothing. However, it does have mass and that is 1.9891×1030 kg.
On earth, that much mass weighs 313.6 newtons (70.55 pounds).
A person who weighed 15.5 pounds on the Moon would weigh about 6 times that on Earth, or about 93 pounds.