On Neptune you would weight about 14% more than you weigh on Earth.
Your mass will not but your weight will.
Pluto has far less mass than Neptune, making it much lighter in weight.
Uranus is a little bit bigger if you measure it with Neptune, but even though Uranus is bigger- Neptune is actually heavier if you measure their weight. Which means even if Uranus is bigger, Neptune is heavier.
The mass on Neptune is 50kg although this is only due to mass being gravity independant; assuming you mean it's weight.It's Weight on Neptune would be: 600kg.(weight = mass * g)
You would weigh 119 pounds on Neptune if you were 100 pounds on Earth. However, Neptune is a gas planet consisting of a methane atmosphere so you can't actually stand on it.
do yohg
It is dependant on the weight, colour and clarity as with any gem
jupiter,neptune u would weight more...and mercury least
Strictly speaking you should say "mass" for this sort of question. Anyway Neptune's mass is about 17 times the Earth's mass.
Uranus is a little bit bigger if you measure it with Neptune, but even though Uranus is bigger- Neptune is actually heavier if you measure their weight. Which means even if Uranus is bigger, Neptune is heavier.
The gravitational acceleration at the surface of Neptune is 11.0 meters (36.1 ft) per second2.That's about 12.2% greater than at the earth's surface.The gravitational force on an object (the object's 'weight') on Neptune depends on the object's mass.The force ('weight') will be 12.2% greater than the force (the object's 'weight') on earth.
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.