It would be more proper to ask, "What is the mass of planet Earth?"1 The quick answer to that is: approximately 6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (6E+24) kilograms The interesting sub-question is, "How did anyone figure that out?" It's not like the planet steps onto the scale each morning before it takes a shower. The measurement of the planet's weight is derived from the gravitational attraction that the Earth has for objects near it. It turns out that any two masses have a gravitational attraction for one another. If you put two Bowling balls near each other, they will attract one another gravitationally. The attraction is extremely slight, but if your instruments are sensitive enough you can measure the gravitational attraction that two bowling balls have on one another. From that measurement, you could determine the mass of the two objects. The same is true for two Golf balls, but the attraction is even slighter because the amount of gravitational force depends on mass of the objects.
Something that weighs 20 on Earth would weigh approximately 21.2 on Saturn. This is due to the different gravitational pull on Saturn compared to Earth.
On Jupiter, you would weigh about 501 pounds. This is because Jupiter has a much stronger gravitational pull than Earth, which would make you weigh more if you were on that planet.
Weight depends on the gravitational pull of a planet. On Mars, which has about 38% of Earth's gravity, you would weigh about 380 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.
That would depend on the planet's radius. The strength of gravity depends on both the mass of the object in question and the distance from its center of mass. If the planet in question had the same radius as Earth, then the person would weigh 200 lbs as gravity would be twice as strong. If the planet had the same density as Earth it would have 1.26 times Earth's radius and gravity would be 1.26 times as strong and the person would weigh 126 lbs. If the planet had about 1.41 times Earth's radius then that person's would weight 100 lbs.
About 10% less than you do on Earth.
Not much, if you weigh 100lbs on Earth, you would weigh 37.7lbs on Mars.
Planet Earth weight is 5.972E24 kg. Earth, also known as the world, Terra, or Gaia, is the third planet from the Sun.
you would weight about 6.4% of what you do on Earth.
the same
No. Weight is the measure of how much force a planet pulls an object, that force is determined by the planet's mass and radius, and each planet has a different mass and radius.
Something that weighs 20 on Earth would weigh approximately 21.2 on Saturn. This is due to the different gravitational pull on Saturn compared to Earth.
Well you would need to know the force of Gravity on the surface of Planet A to answer this. The equation to use would be 5 multiplied by the force of gravity on Planet A = the weight in kilograms. So if Gravity on planet A was twice that on Earth then it would weigh 10Kg and if it was 1/2 that on Earth it would weigh 2.5 kg.
On Jupiter, you would weigh about 501 pounds. This is because Jupiter has a much stronger gravitational pull than Earth, which would make you weigh more if you were on that planet.
earth and neptune
Uranus is a gas planet. You would weigh about 88.6 pounds at the point where the atmospheric pressure is about equal to earth's. The closer to the core you go, the more you would weigh.
On Mars, the gravity is about 38% of Earth's gravity. Therefore, a 200-pound person on Earth would weigh around 76 pounds on Mars.