210 newtons is the weight of 21.41 kilograms of mass on Earth.
If the child weighs 100 N on Earth, then his mass is about 10.2 kilograms.
Yes, weight is directly proportional to mass, on earth weight = mass X 9.8 or sometimes it is simplified to 10, the unit for weight is newtons (N)
If "1500 N" is its weight on earth, then its mass is 153.06 kg. (rounded)
80 kg
An object that weighs 45.32 N on earth has 4.624 kg of mass. (rounded)
If the child weighs 100 N on Earth, then his mass is about 10.2 kilograms.
314 N + 271 N = 585 N BUT mass is not the same as weight! Weight is measured in Newtons (N) and mass in Kg. On Earth, 9.8N/Kg is the weight to mass ratio, so... 585 divided by 9.8 is roughly 60, so... Total mass = 60 Kg (585 N)
a mass in a math is the weight in n object
Weight = (mass) x (gravity)Mass = (weight) / (gravity) = (39.2 N) / (9.8 m/sec2) = 4 kilograms
Mass (kg) x Gravitational Field Strength (Gravity) (N/kg) = Weight (N)GFS on earth = 10 N/kg
40kg of mass, 400 (approx) N of weight.
If your mass is 120 kg, then you weigh about 1,177 N on Earth, and about 195 N on the moon. Your mass doesn't change, no matter where you are.
The mass remains 8 kg because mass is always constant. The weight would be 10 N, or one sixth of 60 N.
The weight of an object is given as the formula W=mg where W is the weight, m is the mass and g is the gravitational acceleration (or the gravity of planet). On earth, g is generalized as 10 N kg-1(about 9.8 N kg-1 to be more exact). On the moon, it is about 10/6 N kg-1. So, the weight of a 10kg mass on earth would be 100 N (N is Newton, the SI unit for weight) while the mass would be 16.7 N on the moon.
Your mass is always the same.
The Newton - weight is measured in force. mass*gravity = weight mass (kg) gravity (m/s^2) weight in (N)
The SI unit of mass is the kilogram. Actually, while the SI unit of mass is the kilogram, mass and weight are different; weight is ALWAYS measured in NEWTONS (n)!