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The gravitational pull on Venus is 0.91 of Earth's gravitational pull. If your mass on Earth is 15 kg, your weight is 147 lbs. Which means your mass on Venus is ____________ kg, and your weight on Venus is ___________ lbs.

2006-11-02 15:53:58 · 7 answers · asked by C.J. W 3 in Science & Mathematics Physics

7 answers

Which means your mass on Venus is 15 kg, and your weight on Venus is 147 * .91 = 134 lbs.

2006-11-02 18:16:42 · answer #1 · answered by ry 1 · 0 0

The mass is the same, 15 kg, but your weight is 0.91 of 147, or 134 lbs, approximately.

2006-11-02 23:56:06 · answer #2 · answered by Scythian1950 7 · 1 0

Mass on venus = 15 kg (its independant of gravity)
Weightr on Venus = 147lbs/1g=0.91g/xlbs = 147*0.91 = 133.77lbs
which should be reported to 2 sig figs like this 130 (and yes, the lack of period matters!)

2006-11-02 23:59:16 · answer #3 · answered by Scooter_MacGyver 3 · 0 0

Your mass would still be the same. Your weight would be .91 of that on Earth. So your weight on Venus would be 133.77lbs.

2006-11-03 00:58:53 · answer #4 · answered by futureastronaut1 3 · 0 0

Exactly, mass never changes. 133.77 lbs for weight.

2006-11-03 00:13:56 · answer #5 · answered by goodman 2 · 0 0

13.65 kg and
133.77 lbs.
But something is badly screwed up with your numbers since 15 kg only weighs 33lbs ☺


Doug

2006-11-02 23:59:01 · answer #6 · answered by doug_donaghue 7 · 0 0

13.65 Kg or 133.77 LBS

2006-11-02 23:59:19 · answer #7 · answered by daddyspanksalot 5 · 0 0

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