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the sun
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Mass of sun detailed http://phobos.physics.uiowa.edu/~clang/modern_fall02/ 11sept02.html
but sadly no value for g
From a few questions ago;
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Science/Question82187.html
See second reply.
A while ago I posted an entirely serious and accurate answer, stating that the sun weighs 2 quintillion kilogrammes. I am noqw astonished to find that it has been "banned" by the editor. A quintillion is, of course, a million to the power of five (10^30), and 2 quintillion kilogrammes is the accurate and truthful answer to the question. It may duplicate the answer to which brachiopod has referred, but I consider it to be more helpful to put in a direct answer rather than a link to another answer.
2 quintillion kilogrammes is of course 2000 quadrillion tonnes, if that makes it any clearer.
a million is 10^6
a billion is 10^12
a trillion is 10^18
a quadrillion is 10^24
a quintillion is 10^30
It is only the illogical Americans who *INCORRECTLY* think that
a billion is 10^9 (which is in fact a thousand million)
a trillion is 10^12 (which is in fact a billion)
a quadrillion is 10^15 9which is in fact a thousand billion)
etc.