How much would you weigh on the other planets of the solar system? This widget allows you to find out.  Tap the Start button to begin.
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Your Weight on Other Planets
Mars
We'll assume that you have a mass of 50 kg (that's equivalent to approximately 110 pounds). Tap on a planet icon below to see how much you would weigh on that planet.
Earth
Uranus
Saturn
Venus
Jupiter
Neptune
Mercury
Your Weight on Other Planets
PlanetName
DescribeAFunOrInterestingFactThatMarksThis planetAsUniqueFromTheRest
AAA x 10^BBB
DescriptionOfPhotoGoesHere
AAA x 10^BBB
Photo Credit: NASA. Public domain.AAA
AAA kg
EEE N
If you had a mass of ...
Mass (kg):
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but on DDD, you would weigh ...
Radius (m):
which is equal to FFF pounds.
Fun Facts About PlanetName:
Fun Facts About Mercury:
Photo Credit: Great Images in NASA. Public domain.http://grin.hq.nasa.gov/BROWSE/mercury_1.html
which is equal to 41 pounds.
2.43 x 106
Having virtually no atmosphere, the surface of Mercury is scarred by numerous craters - a signature of asteroid impacts. With no atmosphere to reflect sunlight or trap irradiated heat, daytime and evening temperatures vary widely between 427°C and -179°C.
This photo was taken by the Mariner 10 spacecraft during a 1974 flyby. It is the first image acquired of Mercury during the Mariner 10 space mission. 
3.20 x 1023
50 kg
you would weigh 490 N or 110 pounds on Earth; but on Mercury, you would weigh ...
180 N
This color-enhanced photo was taken in 1974 by the Mariner 10 spacecraft. It highlights the thick, CO2-rich atmosphere that keeps Venus' surface hot enough to melt lead.
441 N
Photo Credit: NASA. Public domain.http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/gallery/8915499.jpg
4.88 x 1024
A day on Venus lasts longer than a year on Venus. That is, it takes Venus longer to rotate about its axis (243 Earth-days) than it takes to orbit the sun (117 Earth-days).
which is equal to 99 pounds.
6.07 x 106
you would weigh 490 N or 110 pounds on Earth; but on Venus, you would weigh ...
Fun Facts About Venus:
Photo Credit: Great Images in NASA. Public domain.http://grin.hq.nasa.gov/ABSTRACTS/GPN-2002-000112.html
6.37 x 106
Fun Facts About Earth:
Earth is home to the earthling - the most intelligent and inquisitive creature in the solar system. Earthlings have a genuine hunger to understand the natural world and have pursued science as the avenue to satisfy that hunger.
5.97 x 1024
you would weigh 490 N or 110 pounds on Earth; but you likely already knew that. You need to tap one of the buttons at the bottom of the widget and visit a more interesting planet.
This photo was taken by NASA's GOES 8 weather satellite. The satellite gathers information about clouds that meteorologists use to create 3D weather models.
which is equal to 42 pounds.
Photo Credit: NASA. Public domain.http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Mars
188 N
Fun Facts About Mars:
Mars is known as the Red Planet due to its red appearance. The red appearance is due to iron-rich minerals on its surface in addition to the iron-rich dust that is kicked up into its thin atmosphere by wind storms.
3.38 x 106
6.42 x 1023
This photo was taken by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The photo shows the water-ice clouds, the polar regions, and many geological features that make Mars a current focus of research. 
you would weigh 490 N or 110 pounds on Earth; but on Mars, you would weigh ...
1302 N
Jupiter is the most massive planet in the solar system. It has four large moons and more than 50 moons in all. It has a system of three rings, believed to have been formed from debris that was scattered by asteroid collisions with its moons.
1.90 x 1027
6.98 x 107
Fun Facts About Jupiter:
Photo Credit: NASA. Public domain.http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Jupiter
you would weigh 490 N or 110 pounds on Earth; but on Jupiter, you would weigh ...
which is equal to 293 pounds.
This photo was taken by the Cassini spacecraft, showing the stripes of color (caused by strong winds) and the Giant Red Spot that characterize Jupiter's appearance.
Saturn is known for its rings - a collection of orbiting dust and ice that extends hundreds of thousands kilometers from the planet's surface. The rings are abnormally thin, estimated as being 10 meters (~30 feet) in height.
This photo is a composite of several images captured by the Cassini spacecraft in 2004. The photo depicts the elaborate ring system that surrounds this gas giant of a planet.
you would weigh 490 N or 110 pounds on Earth; but on Saturn, you would weigh ...
which is equal to 126 pounds.
560 N
5.68 x 1026
5.82 x 107
Photo Credit: NASA. Public domain.http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Saturn
Fun Facts About Saturn:
This photo was taken by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. It depicts the blue atmosphere of Uranus and captures one of its moons casting a shadow on Uranus' surface.
Photo Credit: NASA. Public domain.http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Uranus
8.68 x 1025
Fun Facts About Uranus:
you would weigh 490 N or 110 pounds on Earth; but on Uranus, you would weigh ...
Unlike other planets, Uranus rotates in a direction that is at right angles to its orbital plane. This odd angle of rotation is believed to be the result of a collision with an earth-sized asteroid which significantly altered its axis of rotation.
which is equal to 102 pounds.
452 N
2.53 x 107
2.45 x 107
Photo Credit: NASA. Public domain.http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Neptune
567 N
Fun Facts About Neptune:
Neptune is a windy planet with winds that are three times stronger than those found on Jupiter. The Great Dark Spot shown in the photo is a storm similar to Jupiter's Great Red Spot. Unlike Jupiter's storm, Neptune's storms last for only a few years.
1.02 x 1026
This photo was taken by the Voyager 2 spacecraft in 1989. The photo shows Neptune's Great Dark Spot - a storm in the atmosphere that was the size of Earth. 
which is equal to 128 pounds.
you would weigh 490 N or 110 pounds on Earth; but on Neptune, you would weigh ...
Neptune
Having virtually no atmosphere, the surface of Mercury is scarred by numerous craters - a signature of asteroid impacts. With no atmosphere to reflect sunlight or trap irradiated heat, daytime and evening temperatures vary widely between 427°C and -179°C.
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but on Mercury, you would weigh ...
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but on Venus, you would weigh ...
A day on Venus lasts longer than a year on Venus. That is, it takes Venus longer to rotate about its axis (243 Earth-days) than it takes to orbit the sun (117 Earth-days).
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but you likely already knew that. You need to tap one of the buttons at the bottom of the widget and visit a more interesting planet.
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but on Mars, you would weigh ...
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but on Jupiter, you would weigh ...
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but on Saturn, you would weigh ...
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but on Uranus, you would weigh ...
you would weigh BBB N or CCC pounds on Earth; but on Neptune, you would weigh ...