No and you might want to learn English.
Astronauts weigh less on the Moon than on Earth because the Moon has less mass and gravity than Earth. The gravitational force on the Moon is about 1/6th that of Earth, so objects (including astronauts) weigh less on the Moon due to this weaker gravity.
The moon has weaker gravity than Earth does.
You will have less weight on the Moon than on Earth (83.3% less), but your mass will remain unaffected. If you weigh 150lbs on Earth, then you would weigh only 26.55lbs on the Moon.
No, you weigh less because the moon has less mass, or is smaller, than earth whick means that is has less of a gravitational pull.
Men weigh less on the moon because the moon's gravitational pull is weaker than Earth's. The gravitational force depends on the mass of the celestial body, so with the moon being smaller than Earth, there is less gravitational force pulling objects towards its surface.
No, humans weigh less on the Moon than on Earth because the Moon has less gravity. The gravitational force on the Moon is about 1/6th of the gravitational force on Earth, so a person would weigh less on the Moon compared to Earth.
Gravity is weaker on the moon than on Earth, meaning objects weigh less there.
the moon's gravitational pull is far less than that of earth's
Objects weigh less on the Moon than on Earth due to the Moon's lower gravitational pull. Gravity is determined by mass and distance; the Moon has about one-sixth the mass of Earth and a smaller radius, resulting in a weaker gravitational force. Consequently, when an object is on the Moon, it experiences less gravitational attraction, making it weigh significantly less than it does on Earth.
The moon is smaller than earth. The moon is on fourth of Earth, and has less gravity. You would weigh about one sixth on the moon than on the Earth.
The gravity is less on the Moon, because the Moon is smaller than earth; it has less mass, and therefore "sucks" less than the earth. Weight is gravity times mass, you have the same mass on Earth and on the Moon (and in space), but weigh less on the moon.
because the moon's mass is about one-sixth that of the Earth