Question should read:
"What is the force between you and the Earth (convert to pound-force) using Newton's Law of Gravity assuming your weight is 60kg?"
Answer:
F = G*(m1*m2)/r²
= 6.673/100000000000*(60*5973600000000000000000000)/(6371000*6371000)
= 6.673*60*5976000/(6371*6371)
= 6.673*60*59736000/40589641
= 6.673*6*59376/4058.9641
= 585.7 Newtons
= 585.7 * 0.2281 lbf
= 133.6 lbf
Check: 60kg = 60*2.2= 132 lb which is roughly OK
Gravity is a force and its effect on a mass is measured in newtons.
Divide the Newtons by 9.8 (or by 10 for a quick mental estimate). Important: You can't universally convert between kg. and Newtons; mass and force are very different concepts. We can only do this calculation if we assume a certain value for gravity.
Convert that to kilograms. Then multiply by 9.8 to convert to newtons. This assumes standard Earth gravity.
distance between them decreases. gravity is inversely proportional to square of distance between two objects, according to newtons law of gravity
You usually do this to calculate a weight. In this case, multiply the number of kilograms by the force of gravity - in case of Earth, this is about 9.8 meters/second2.
Gravity is a force and its effect on a mass is measured in newtons.
Divide the Newtons by 9.8 (or by 10 for a quick mental estimate). Important: You can't universally convert between kg. and Newtons; mass and force are very different concepts. We can only do this calculation if we assume a certain value for gravity.
Convert that to kilograms. Then multiply by 9.8 to convert to newtons. This assumes standard Earth gravity.
You can't really convert kilograms to newtons, since they measure different things. The relationship is:weight = mass x gravity For normal Earth gravity, you can use a factor of about 9.8 newton/kilogram for gravity.
Convert the grams to the standard unit of mass - the kilogram. Then, assuming standard Earth gravity, multiply it by 9.8 to get the equivalent in newtons.
You multiply the mass by the gravity. Normal Earth gravity is about 9.8 (in meters/second2, or the equivalent newton/kilogram).
distance between them decreases. gravity is inversely proportional to square of distance between two objects, according to newtons law of gravity
You usually do this to calculate a weight. In this case, multiply the number of kilograms by the force of gravity - in case of Earth, this is about 9.8 meters/second2.
Weight = (mass) x (local acceleration of gravity). Mass = (weight) / (local acceleration of gravity) If you know the weight and the local acceleration of gravity, you can calculate the mass. Anywhere on or near the surface of the earth, the local acceleration of gravity is about 9.82 meters per second2 . As an example, an object with a weight of 9.82 newtons has a mass of one kilogram.
equation: weight= mass*gravity weight = 50kg * 9.8 m/s or 10 m/s (samething) =500 newtons or 490 newtons ~hope that helped!
You can't. They are different units that depends on the force acting on the mass. For example, if the only force were gravity (approx 10), you would have approx 1088.6 Newtons
The force of gravity between two objects is measured in newtons. This is no different, technically, than what weight "should" be measured in. We use pounds and kilograms, but we should be using newtons, to be scientifically correct.