You are still not understanding the difference between weight and mass. You obviously do know that an object in a 1G field with a mass of 100kg has a weight of 100kg, while that same object in a 1/6th G field, while only weighing 16kg, nevertheless still has a mass of 100kg.
I've pointed this out before. Kilogram is a unit of mass, never a unit of weight. In SI, weight is newtons, and the weight of a mass depends on the gravity field in which it's measured.
On Earth, 100 kg weighs about 981 N. On the Moon, it weighs about 162 newtons.
A mistake like yours could cost you a grade in physics class.
Fred
Actually, the Newton is a measure of
force not a measure of weight (F = ma)
For simplicity's sake, using kg as weight will suffice for nomenclature.
Besides, I have yet to find a set of bathroom scales, a set of kitchen scales, or a laboratory balance kit with its weights calibrated or marked in "Newtons"!!
When someone asks me how much I weigh, I never answer 747.56 newtons!!
The fact is that an object of 100 kg mass, weighs 100 kg on the Earth because it is in a 1G field
W = mg ... 100 x 1 = 100
and in the lunar gravity its weight is 16.7 kg
W = mg ... 100 x 0.167 = 16.7 (disregarding mascons of course!!)