127 newtons.
Depends on the gravitational force applied on mass (if there was any). On earth at sea level gravitational force is 9.8 m/s^2 so 75kg mass weights 75*9.8 Actually I am not sure about it, I also trying to do vise verse operation. I weight 75kg at sea level, what ,is my mass ? According to the newton's second law Fnet = m*a so the number 75 I see on scale must be the net force which is 75 = mymass * 9.8 hence mymass is 7,65 kg that is I am not that fat !
You'll weigh about 90kg. Weight is the force of attraction between you and the Earth due to gravity. Mathematically, weight = GMm/r^2, where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the Earth, m is your mass, and r is the distance from the center of the Earth to you. Earth has a radius of 3963 miles. When you are on the ISS, your radius from Earth's center is 4183 miles. Working out the math, objects 220 miles above Earth weigh about 90% of what they weigh on the surface. That said, you and the ISS are in constant free-fall toward Earth with zero relative motion between the two of you. The ISS isn't pushing against you like the surface of the Earth does, so you feel a sensation of weightlessness, despite having weight.
The density of the substance is calculated by dividing the mass (169 grams) by the volume (13 milliliters). Therefore, the density of the substance is 169 grams / 13 milliliters = 13 grams per milliliter.
They are two different things.'Mass' is the amount of stuff that an object is made of. Mass never changes.'Weight' is the force of gravity between the object and some other body.Of course, 'weight' usually involves the earth. But it's important to understand that if youtake the same object to the moon or to another planet, it still has the same mass, but theweight will be different over there. It may be more, or it may be less."One kilogram" is a mass. It weighs about 2.2 pounds on earth. If you take it to the moon,it's still the same one kilogram, but up there it weighs about 6 ounces. On Mars, it wouldweigh about 13 ounces, and if you could take it to Jupiter, it would weigh a little over5 pounds there. But it's still the same one kilogram of mass everywhere.
No, not really. Different weight for different people depending on their build ie; muscular. muscle weighs more than fat. But with 13 you start to loose the "puppy fat" fiasco. stop worrying!
The acceleration of gravity at the 'surface' of the sun is 275 meters/sec2.An object with a mass of 372 grams weighs about 3.65 newtons (13 ounces) on earth,and about 102.3 newtons (23 pounds) on the sun.
5 newton
Depends on the gravitational force applied on mass (if there was any). On earth at sea level gravitational force is 9.8 m/s^2 so 75kg mass weights 75*9.8 Actually I am not sure about it, I also trying to do vise verse operation. I weight 75kg at sea level, what ,is my mass ? According to the newton's second law Fnet = m*a so the number 75 I see on scale must be the net force which is 75 = mymass * 9.8 hence mymass is 7,65 kg that is I am not that fat !
12-13 - it also is determined by weight. The average child reaches the right weight around that age
i dont know but you have to be 13!!
no they are not
no, this is perfectly normal for a child your age. no, this is perfectly normal for a child your age.
Height: up to 13 inches at shoulder; or 13 to 15 inches at shoulder Weight: 18 to 30 pounds
Aluminum's atomic number is 13. Its atomic MASS is 25.98154.
Look up your BMI (Body Mass Index)
For your height and weight, you have a BMI (body mass index) of 19. On a BMI growth chart, as a 13 year old girl, your weight is almost in the exact middle of the normal range for other girls your age. So the answer is yes!
yes you are overweight your BMI (body mass index) is 26.3 Underweight =