When you go anywhere away from earth, your weightchanges, depending on where you are and what you're near.
Your mass never changes.
Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, while weight is the force of gravity acting on an object's mass. Mass remains constant regardless of location, while weight can change depending on the strength of gravity.
Weight and mass are two different properties of an object. Mass is the amount of matter in an object, while weight is the force of gravity acting on an object's mass. The key distinction is that mass is a measure of the amount of substance in an object, while weight is the force exerted on that mass due to gravity.
You can't compare the mass and the weight. They are different types of things, so comparing them is like comparing, say, a unit of length (like the meter, or foot) with a unit of time (like the second, or hour). Therefore, it doesn't make sense of saying that the mass is "equal to" or "different from" the weight.
Weight will be different on the moon as compared to Earth due to the moon's weaker gravitational pull. Mass, however, remains the same regardless of location as it is a measure of the amount of matter an object contains.
People often confuse mass and weight because they are related concepts but have different meanings in physics. Mass refers to the amount of matter in an object and does not change regardless of its location, while weight is the force of gravity acting on an object's mass and can vary depending on the gravitational field strength.
Your mass is the same wherever you are, on Earth, on Saturn, on the Sun. Your weight changes if you are on a different planet.
Mass is a property of the object, no matter what else is around. It doesn't change, regardless of where the object is. Weight is the result of gravitational interaction between the object and something else, so it depends on what else is around. Your weight on Saturn would be different from your weight on Earth, because Saturn's mass is different from Earth'smass, and your distance from Saturn's center would be different from the distance between you and Earth's center.
On Saturn, your weight would be different due to the planet's stronger gravitational pull compared to Earth, which is about 1.07 times that of Earth. While your mass remains constant regardless of location, your weight would increase if you were on Saturn. For example, if you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 160.5 pounds on Saturn, but your mass would still be the same.
Saturn's weight would be determined by its mass and the gravitational pull it experiences, but since weight is a force, it would be different for an object on Saturn's surface compared to one on Earth due to their varying gravitational accelerations.
The planet Saturn has 95 times more mass than the planet Earth, but remarkably you would actually be lighter, not heavier, if you could stand on the clouds of Saturn. If you weigh 180 pounds on Earth you would weigh 165 pounds on Saturn. The reason for this is Saturn is much less dense than Earth. In other words, although Saturn contains 95 times more matter than Earth, that matter is spread out over a much, much vaster area. The width of Saturn is equal to the width of nine planet Earths. Saturn is blanketed by clouds and is believed to have no solid surface.
Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight. - Wikipedia lists the mass as 5.6846
To convert your weight from Earth to Saturn, you would first calculate your weight on Earth using the equation Weight = Mass x Gravity, then divide that weight by Saturn's gravity (which is about 1.08 times that of Earth). This would give you an estimation of how much you would weigh on Saturn.
Mass is the mass, weight is mass with gravity acting upon it
None. Just a huge amount of different gasses. Saturn has no land mass and no minerals on it.
weight is different in different gavities but mass is not, volume is not involved
Well mass is different from weight in one major way. Mass is how easily something can lift more than weight being how heavy an object is. For example a balloon has mass, but a person carries weight.
"Weight" is not really the correct word, you probably mean "mass". Anyway Saturn has a mass of about : 568,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 metric tons. That's 5.68 x 10 to the power 23 metric tons. If you want the "tons" sometimes used in Britain or the USA, they are slightly different.