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.
The weight of a basketball would vary on each planet depending on its gravity. The weight of a basketball on Mars would be about 0.38 times its weight on Earth, on the Moon it would be about 0.17 times its weight on Earth, and on Jupiter it would be about 2.36 times its weight on Earth.
Jupiter is approximately 318 times more massive than Mars.
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 Mars, you would weigh about 37.8% of your weight on Earth. So if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 38 pounds on Mars.
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 less on Mars than you do on Earth, because Mars has less mass and weaker gravity than Earth.
The weight of the bag of sugar on Mars would be about 0.38 times its weight on Earth, due to Mars having weaker gravity. On Jupiter, the weight of the bag of sugar would be about 2.53 times its weight on Earth, since Jupiter's gravity is much stronger.
This question is harder than it might seem. The answer is: You would weigh less on both Venus and Mars. You would weigh more on Jupiter. As regards Saturn, you could weigh more or less depending where on the planet you were. For example, at Saturn's equator the effect of the planet's rotation would be enough to reduce your effective weight to less than your Earth weight.
The volume of Jupiter is 1,321.3 times that of the Earth The volume of Mars is 0.151 times that of the Earth So: 1321.3/0.151 = 8750.33 Mars fits 8750.33 times inside Jupiter.
The weight of a basketball would vary on each planet depending on its gravity. The weight of a basketball on Mars would be about 0.38 times its weight on Earth, on the Moon it would be about 0.17 times its weight on Earth, and on Jupiter it would be about 2.36 times its weight on Earth.
Jupiter is approximately 318 times more massive than Mars.
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.
No Mars isn't in Jupiter if it was then there would only be 8 planets in our solar system.
On Mars, you would weigh about 37.8% of your weight on Earth. So if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 38 pounds on Mars.
Give that Jupiter's mean radius is 69,911 kilometers and Mars' radius is 3,396 km, you would be able to line up about 20 Mars across Jupiter. For comparison you could line up 11 Earths across Jupiter. In terms of volume you can fit 8,724 Mars and 1,321 Earths inside Jupiter.
A person would weigh approximately 38% of their weight on Earth when on Mars due to its lower gravity. This means that someone who weighs 150 pounds on Earth would weigh about 57 pounds on Mars.