Kilograms to Earth Masses
1 Kilogram equals 1.67e-25 Earth Masses using fixed astronomy mass constants anchored to kilograms.
Direct Answer
1 Kilogram equals 1.67e-25 Earth Masses
This conversion uses fixed astronomy mass constants anchored to kilograms.
For 2 Kilograms, the result equals 3.35e-25 Earth Masses.
Converter Calculator
1.67e-25 Earth Masses (M_earth)
SwitchExplanation
This page converts Kilograms into Earth Masses using fixed astronomy mass constants anchored to kilograms. The direct answer, calculator, and common values table all follow the same factor.
Formula: Earth Masses = Kilograms × 1.67e-25. Why: SI mass units provide the common basis, then the calculator applies the fixed planetary or stellar reference constant for the target unit.
Kilograms (kg): the SI base unit of mass, used here as the common normalization basis for astronomy mass comparisons.
Earth Masses (M_earth): a planetary reference mass unit based on Earth's mass, often used in planetary science and exoplanet reporting.
This route is useful when expressing astronomical mass references in SI units, or restating SI mass values in familiar planetary or stellar scales.
Because the route stays inside one kilogram-based reference model, the mirror page reverses the same constants without changing the underlying assumptions.
Common Conversion Values
| Kilograms (kg) | Earth Masses (M_earth) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 1.67e-25 |
| 2 | 3.35e-25 |
| 5 | 8.37e-25 |
| 10 | 1.67e-24 |
| 100 | 1.67e-23 |
| 1,000 | 1.67e-22 |
Frequently Asked Questions
How is Kilograms to Earth Masses calculated?
The factor is derived by reducing both units to kilograms and applying the fixed planetary reference-mass constants for the route.
How do I reverse Kilograms to Earth Masses?
Use the mirror Earth Masses to Kilograms route; it applies the inverse relationship for the opposite direction with the same assumptions.
How many kilograms are in 1 Earth mass?
1 Earth mass equals 5.9722 × 10^24 kilograms, so this page is useful when converting SI mass into a planetary reference scale.