Weight is the measure of the force with which the Earth's gravity is pulling an object to its center. Since it is a measure of force, it is often expressed in Newtons.
The SI unit for mass is the Kilogram. The SI unit for weight in the Newton.
Babies are typically measured in kilograms because it represents their mass, which remains constant regardless of their location. Newton, on the other hand, is a unit of force and would not provide a meaningful measurement for a baby's weight.
The force (equal on both objects) is measured in newtons.
If you mean a device to measure weight or force (expressed in newtons), that will measure force, not mass; but if you do that, you can get a pretty good idea about the mass, if you know the gravitational field. Near Earth, the gravitational field is approximately 9.8 newton/kilogram, so if you know the weight (in newton), just divide by 9.8 to get the mass (in kilograms).
Mass is commonly expressed in kg, g, slugs, and in lbm.Weight is commonly expressed in Newtons or lbf.W = ( m ) ( g )Mass in kg and g in m per s^2 yield weight in Newtons.
Weight is a force (measured in Newton). Pressure is force per unit area (measured in Newton / meter2, also known as Pascal).
Force is measured in newton. Weight is a force; therefore it is also measured in newton.
Weight is measured in units called Newton, while mass is measured in units called grams and kilograms.
Units of force, such as pound, newton, stone, etc.
In the metric system they weight is measured in Newton. Not gram or kilogram, which are measures of mass, not weight.
Newton: 1N= 1kg*m/s²
The Newton - weight is measured in force. mass*gravity = weight mass (kg) gravity (m/s^2) weight in (N)
Weight is a force, so weight is measured in newton. However, when people talk about a person's "weight" they usually mean its "mass" - people tend to confuse that. Mass is measured in kilograms.
A slightly garbled question, but is the unit of weight due to gravity the newton, yes. Weight is the force exerted on a body by gravity, the unit for all forces is the newton. Mass is measured in kilograms, mass is a body's resistance to acceleration. In everyday usage mass and weight are virtually interchangable, since the acceleration mass resists is that due to gravity. So weight is measured in newtons, but kilograms are used as a measure of weight on everyday language.
The weight of an object is the force with which gravity (usually, Earth's gravity) attracts it. Weight is measured in units of force; in SI units, this is the Newton.
Weight is technically a force. It is the force exerted on a body by gravity, therefore the correct unit for weight is the newton. In everyday speech what people really mean by weight is mass, mass is measured in kilograms.
Depending on what exactly you want to measure, that may refer to:* The weight of an object, measured in newton. * The strength of the gravitational field, measured in newton per kilogram, or the equivalent meters per second squared.