Physics, asked by izaan3412, 5 months ago

An object of mass ‘m’ weighs 600N on the surface of earth. What would be its

mass and weight on the surface of the moon? (Given g=10m/s2

)​

Answers

Answered by GARIMA672
0

Answer:

Weight= mg=600N

m= 600/10 = 60g

mass on moon= 60g

weight on moon= 60/6 = 10N

hope it help you

please mark as brainliest if you find my answer helpful

Explanation:

mass always remain same

only weight canges

Answered by Anonymous
8

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 \large \tt  \red{✦Answer✦}

 \small \tt{Given,}

 \small{ \tt{ \tt \implies \: Weight  \: on  \: earth = 600 \: Newton \: (n)}}

 \small \tt{ \implies \: Let \: ( g ) \: = 10 m / s ^{2} \:  on \:  eath}

\small\tt{ \implies \: Mass \:  on \:  earth =  \frac{600}{10} = 60 \: kg }

  \small\tt{Now , \:  Weight  \: on  \: moon \:  = Mg}

 \small \tt{ \implies \: Mass \: (m) = 60 \: Kg}

 \tt{ \small{Gravitation (g) = due \: to \: gravity \: on moon \:  =  \frac{1}{6} th \: value \: of \: earth.}}

 \tt \small{ \implies \: So, Weight \: on \: the \: moon \:  =  \frac{1}{6}th \: of \: the \: weight \: on \: earth. }

 \tt \small{ \implies \: Weight \:  on \:  the  \: moon = 600 \times  \frac{1}{6}  = 100 \: Newton \: (n) \: }

 \tt \small{Hence  \: , Mass   = 60 \: kg \: \: and \:  weight  \: on  \: the \:  surface  \: of \:  moon =100\:N }

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