For any object near Earth's surface, to obtain the weight, just multiply the mass by 9.8.
There is gravity on the moon! The gravity on the Moon is 1/6th that of what is observed on Earth. An object with a weight of 36 kg on Earth would weigh 1/6th that on the Moon. 1/6th of 36kg is, 6 kg. An object with a MASS of 36 kg on Earth would have the same 36 kg MASS on the moon. Mass is the amount of matter that makes up an object, whereas WEIGHT is the measurement of the force of gravity on that MASS. This is why your weight will change when visiting other planets, but your mass stays constant plant to planet!
yes it is a contributing factor. lets say you were given the weight of a ball in Newtons, lets say 8 Newtons . you would multiply 9.8 0r 10(if you are rounding) by the number of Newtons(8) and you would get your answer in Kilograms. If you are given the Kilograms it is not a contributing factor to weight.
Answer 1:551.1557 lbs.Answer 2:An oddly phrased question.On Earth, a person massing 250 kilograms also weighs 250 kilograms. Or 550 pounds.On the moon, he would weigh about 1/6th that amount. On Mars, about 1/3rd that amount. In free fall, he would weigh zero kilograms.His mass would of course always remain the same.
Mass is a characteristic of the person or object. It stays with him/it and doesn't change no matter where he/it goes. "Newtons" is not a measurement of mass. It's a measurement of force, and it could represent the person's weight. If the person weighs 490 newtons on Earth, then his mass is about 50 kilograms anywhere, and he would weigh about 81 newtons on the moon.
Neither. Both gram and kilograms are units for measuring mass, not weight. The weight would be measured in Newtons.
There is gravity on the moon! The gravity on the Moon is 1/6th that of what is observed on Earth. An object with a weight of 36 kg on Earth would weigh 1/6th that on the Moon. 1/6th of 36kg is, 6 kg. An object with a MASS of 36 kg on Earth would have the same 36 kg MASS on the moon. Mass is the amount of matter that makes up an object, whereas WEIGHT is the measurement of the force of gravity on that MASS. This is why your weight will change when visiting other planets, but your mass stays constant plant to planet!
yes it is a contributing factor. lets say you were given the weight of a ball in Newtons, lets say 8 Newtons . you would multiply 9.8 0r 10(if you are rounding) by the number of Newtons(8) and you would get your answer in Kilograms. If you are given the Kilograms it is not a contributing factor to weight.
Newtons is a unit of weight or force. The mass unit would be kilograms. 1 liter of water has a mass of 1 kilogram. On Earth, this would have a weight of 9.8 Newtons.
Your mass (kilograms) would stay the same as it never changes. But if you are talking about weight (newtons) it would depend on what you were comparing it to. If you have a weight of 300 newtons on earth then you would weigh 49.8 newtons on the moon therefore you would have lost weight. Whereas if you weighed 20.1 Newtons on Pluto you would weigh 49.8 newtons on the moon, loosing weight.
Kilograms * * * * * No you would not! A kilogram is a measure of mass. Weight is measured in Newtons!
You cannot weigh 45 kilograms because a kilogram is a measure of mass, not of weight. If your mass is 45 kilograms, your weight on the surface of the sun would be 12330 newtons.
Kilograms are a measure of mass, as opposed to 'weight.' You would weigh 35 pounds, or 155 newtons, on the moon. This would feel like 15 kilograms on earth.
Normally the MASS would be specified. Although this is informally called the weight, mass and weight are two quite different things. The mass of a garbage truck might be indicated in kilograms, or in tons (thousands of kilograms). The actual weight would be measured in Newtons.
Multiply the mass (in kilograms) by the gravitation (9.8 meters per second square, near the Earth's surface), and you get the weight (in Newtons).
The person would be about 89 kilograms in weight. The person would still have a mass of 100 kilograms, of course. The strict scientific unit of weight is the "newton" because that is the unit of force and weight exerts a force. The 100 kg person weighs 890 newtons on Venus. However, normally we say "kilograms" or "kilograms weight", as long as we are clear that weight and mass are different.