take weight of five of your friends find out what their weight will be on the Mars
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Answered by
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Mark it brainliest answer please
Hey bro here is your answer.....
Let weight of five friends on earth .... Be.
A=50kg B=30kg C=20kg D=60kg E=120kg.. (an assumption)
So as we know that the weight on moon is 1/6th of the weight on earth....
Wm=1/6We
[we is the weight on earth. And wm is the wieght on moon. ]
So weight of friends on moon will be...
A=1/6*50=8.3kg
B=1/6*30=5kg
C=1/6*20=3.3kg
D=1/6*60=10kg
E=1/6*120=20kg..
Hope it helps you..
Pls mark as brainliest answer if you found something knowledgeable...
Thanks...
Hey bro here is your answer.....
Let weight of five friends on earth .... Be.
A=50kg B=30kg C=20kg D=60kg E=120kg.. (an assumption)
So as we know that the weight on moon is 1/6th of the weight on earth....
Wm=1/6We
[we is the weight on earth. And wm is the wieght on moon. ]
So weight of friends on moon will be...
A=1/6*50=8.3kg
B=1/6*30=5kg
C=1/6*20=3.3kg
D=1/6*60=10kg
E=1/6*120=20kg..
Hope it helps you..
Pls mark as brainliest answer if you found something knowledgeable...
Thanks...
Answered by
1
It’s really quite simple. All you have to do is multiply the person’s weight on Earth by the gravitational pull of the plane
Mercury: 0.38
Venus: 0.91
Earth: 1.00
Mars: 0.38
Jupiter: 2.34
Saturn: 1.06
Uranus: 0.92
Neptune: 1.19
Pluto: 0.06
Because weight = mass x surface gravity, multiplying your weight on Earth by the numbers above will give you your weight on the surface of each planet. If you weigh 150 pounds (68 kg.) on Earth, you would weigh 351 lbs. (159 kg.) on Jupiter, 57 lbs. (26 kg.) on Mars and a mere 9 lbs. (4 kg.) on the dwarf planet of Pluto.
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