You would weigh 57 pounds.
Wiki User
β 14y agoAssuming the same mass, you would weigh about 55.3 pounds on Neptune due to its stronger gravitational pull compared to Earth.
A person who weighs 90 pounds on Earth would weigh approximately 92.7 pounds on Neptune due to Neptune's larger mass and stronger gravitational pull compared to Earth.
On Neptune, your weight would be approximately 170 pounds due to the stronger gravitational pull on that planet compared to Earth.
A 90-pound person on Earth would weigh about 102 pounds on Neptune, due to Neptune's stronger gravitational pull.
The 'surface' acceleration of gravity on Neptune is 11.15 m/s2 . That's about 14% greater than on the Earth's surface. If you weigh 200 pounds on Earth, then at the depth in Neptune's gaseous mantle where the pressure is equal to Earth's sea-level atmospheric pressure, you'd weigh about 228 pounds.
A 70 pound person on Earth would weigh approximately 97 pounds on Neptune. Neptune's gravity is about 1.14 times stronger than Earth's gravity, resulting in the increase in weight.
78 pounds on Neptune.
A person who weighs 90 pounds on Earth would weigh approximately 92.7 pounds on Neptune due to Neptune's larger mass and stronger gravitational pull compared to Earth.
On Neptune, your weight would be approximately 170 pounds due to the stronger gravitational pull on that planet compared to Earth.
you would way 1 pound if you weigh 15 pounds on earth
The 'surface' acceleration of gravity on Neptune is 11.15 m/s2 . That's about 14% greater than on the Earth's surface. If you weigh 200 pounds on Earth, then at the depth in Neptune's gaseous mantle where the pressure is equal to Earth's sea-level atmospheric pressure, you'd weigh about 228 pounds.
95.6 pounds
If you weighed 100 lbs on Earth you would weigh 112.5 lbs on Neptune
well as i have researched i would have to say you would actually weigh 62kg and in lbs you would weigh 72lbs so in kg you would weigh 7kgs more and in lbs you would weight 12lbs more see simple hope that answers your question!
The problem with this question is that Neptune, and the other "gas giants," don't really have a surface per se for you to be "on", so it's kind of an arbitrary definition.Neptune's "surface gravity" is slightly higher than Earth's... about 14%, which means if you weigh 140 pounds here, on neptune you'd weigh around 160.
If you weigh 90 pounds on Earth, you would still weigh 90 pounds on Earth. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on an object, so it remains constant regardless of the location on Earth.
The Earth's weight is approximately 13.2 sextillion pounds, which is equivalent to 211.6 sextillion ounces.
82 pounds is a measure of mass and so will be 82 pounds anywhere. Mass is independent of the force of gravity. Unless, of course, you were thinking of 82 pounds Sterling. I doubt if that would be worth much - certainly not enough to pay for the fuel for your journey back to earth!