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The weight of an object on the moon is about 1/6th of its weight on Earth. This is because the moon's gravity is weaker than Earth's gravity. So, if an object weighs 60 pounds on Earth, it would weigh about 10 pounds on the moon.
'Kg' is a unit of mass, not weight. On Earth, 1 kg of mass weighs 9.8 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.102 kg of mass. On the moon, the same kg of mass weighs 1.6 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.616 kg of mass. On Mars, the same kg of mass weighs 3.7 newtons, and 1 newton is the weight of about 0.269 kg of mass.
166.4kg on earth weighs 1,630.72 newtons or 367 lbs.
On Earth, 58.8 kg of mass weighs 576.7 newtons (129.6 pounds).
On the moon, 10 kg of mass weighs 16.2 newtons (3.65 pounds). (rounded)
Atlas
On the Earth, the object weighs 6.04 times as much as its weight on the moon.
On the Moon one weighs one-sixth the weight on Earth.
54kg in newtons on earth weighs 529.2 newtons.
C. =
On Earth it weighs 20 kilograms.
1 kg weighs 2.2 pounds on earth. 2.5 kg weighs (2.5 x 2.2) = 5.5 pounds on earth
No. On Earth, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 newtons. On the Moon, the weight of each kilogram is about 1/6 of what it is on Earth.
No. The weight of any object on the Moon would be about 1/6 the weight on Earth.
Mass doesn't depend on gravity whereas weight does. And moon has gravity less than earth so a body weighs less on moon as compared to its weight on earth. But mass remains same.
If something weighs 127kg on Earth it will weigh 21kg on the Moon.
On earth, a kilogram of mass weighs around 2.2 pounds. Mass does not change unlike weight, which is reliant on the force of gravity.