Weight is determined by the gravitational force acting on an object. On different planets or moons, the strength of gravity varies, which impacts an object's weight. Your mass remains the same regardless of the location, but your weight changes based on the gravitational pull of the celestial body you are on.
You would weigh about 1/6 as much on the moon as you weigh on earth if you were not wearing heavy equipment. I would weigh about 560 ounces on the moon.
No. they weigh the same. The terminology of a half moon refers to how much of the moon can be seen.
That depends on the gravity at the surface of that planet. On the moon it would be 1/6 your weight on earth. On mars I think it is 1/3, on Jupiter it would be about 5000 times, though no ones checked that yet.
On the moon, an object would weigh approximately 16.2% of its weight on Earth. Therefore, 2.7 kilograms would weigh approximately 0.44 kilograms on the moon.
The position of the earth and moon on their orbit around the sun, determines how much and what area of the moon is lit by sunlight. The moon's phases are what we can view from the earth.
Gravity on the moon is about 1/6th of the gravity on Earth. This means that if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh about 16.5 pounds on the moon.
You would weigh about 1/6 as much on the moon as you weigh on earth if you were not wearing heavy equipment. I would weigh about 560 ounces on the moon.
On the Moon, you'd weigh 38.25 pounds.
About 12.8
No. they weigh the same. The terminology of a half moon refers to how much of the moon can be seen.
If you weighed 100kg on Earth, you would weigh 13.2kg on the Moon
On the moon you would weigh 11.6 pounds.
On Earth's moon, it would weigh 7.4 kilograms.
1 kg mass would weigh about 167 grams on the moon.
Your weight on the moon would be about 1/6th of your weight on Earth. So, if you weigh 40kg on Earth, on the moon you would weigh approximately 6.67kg.
15.5 pounds
The weight of a spaceship will vary depending on its size, design, and materials used in construction. Larger spacecraft that carry heavy payloads, such as crewed spacecraft or satellites, can weigh several tons to hundreds of tons. Smaller spacecraft, like cubesats, may only weigh a few kilograms.