Yes, you would weigh slightly more on Mount Everest than in Death Valley, but the difference is minimal. Weight is influenced by gravitational force, which varies with altitude and distance from the Earth's center. While Mount Everest is higher above sea level, which generally reduces weight due to lower gravity, the effect is outweighed by the fact that Mount Everest is closer to the Earth's center compared to Death Valley, which is below sea level. However, this difference is very small and typically not noticeable without precise instruments.
You would weigh 30.8443 pounds.
No. On Mercury you would weigh 37% of what you weigh on Earth.
You would weigh 90.8 on Neptune. Also, you would weigh 13.1 on the moon; and 200.7 on Jupiter.
You would weigh 102 lb.
You would weigh about 37.8 lbs
On Mars, you would weigh about 23.7 pounds. On Venus, you would weigh about 58.5 pounds. On Jupiter, you would weigh about 165.3 pounds.
you would weigh it by using grams
In classical physics, the attraction of gravity depends on the mass (weight) of the two objects (you and the earth) divided by the square of the distance between them. Thus you would weigh more in a valley (closer to the center of the earth) than you would on a mountain top (farther away)One might want to argue that when you were in the valley, the mass of the mountains above you countered the pull of the earth, but I think this effect would be trivial
50 pounda
No
If you weigh 120 pounds, you would weigh approximately 54.4 kilograms.
They would weigh 112.5lbs.