That's not quite the proper phrasing, but yes, the Moon's gravity does indeed have an effect on the Earth, most obviously the tides.
The force of gravity on the Moon is 1/6th that of the Earth, so a spaceship is pulled down with a smaller force. The Moon has no atmosphere, so there is no air drag to slow it down.
When you jump, you exert a force greater than the force of gravity to achieve a net positive upward acceleration - at least until your feet leave the ground and you quit exerting force. The net upward force is Fnet = (force you push off with) - (force of gravity) Because the moon has less mass than the earth, the force of gravity is less. As a result, the force you exert to jump on earth would give a higher net upward acceleration on the moon and allow you jump higher.
You cant jump off the moon and land on earth because , there is zero gravity in space , so you would float away
The Moon has mass, so it does have gravity. That is why people can walk on the Moon and not go off into space. The Moon's force of gravity (1.6m/sec2) is just 1/6 of the Earth's (9.81 meters/sec2) because the Moon is not as massive as the Earth. The lower force of gravity means that when the astronauts walked on the moon, each step was more like a large bounce !
Yes, force of gravity. That is why it orbits the earth rather than flying off in a straight line.
On the moon you would weigh about on sixth of what you do on Earth.
Gravity and the pull of the moon are the same thing. The pull of the moon is caused by the moons' gravity.
It does, actually. Every mass attracts every other mass by gravity. If the Moon were not attracted to the Earth by gravity, the Moon would go sailing off into space all alone. The Moon does not get closer to the Earth because the Moon is in orbit around the Earth.
The force of gravity on the Moon is 1/6th that of the Earth, so a spaceship is pulled down with a smaller force. The Moon has no atmosphere, so there is no air drag to slow it down.
The vehicles used on the Moon were designed with the Moon's gravity in mind. They would not function correctly on Earth. So the answer is that the Moon's gravity affects the lunar rovers in the same way as gravity affects cars and other vehicles on Earth.... it is what keeps them on the surface, and prevents from from floating off into space.
When gravity disappears, and pigs fly along with it.
It doesn't. Gravity cannot be shut off or blocked.
If the Earth's gravity were to stop pulling on the moon, the moon would continue to move. It would, however, fling off away from the Earth rather than continuing in its orbit.
When you jump, you exert a force greater than the force of gravity to achieve a net positive upward acceleration - at least until your feet leave the ground and you quit exerting force. The net upward force is Fnet = (force you push off with) - (force of gravity) Because the moon has less mass than the earth, the force of gravity is less. As a result, the force you exert to jump on earth would give a higher net upward acceleration on the moon and allow you jump higher.
You cant jump off the moon and land on earth because , there is zero gravity in space , so you would float away
Gravitational forces cause the Earth to pull on the Moon, and the Moon to pull on the Earth (Earth is about 81 times as massive). Since the Moon is travelling with sufficient velocity, it does not fall into the Earth, but rather orbits around the Earth. The mutual attractive force between the Earth and Moon, due to gravity, keeps the two bodies in a state of mutual revolution. If the force of gravity didn't exist, then the Moon would take off from the Earth in a straight line, and the Earth would likewise take off from the Sun.
The Moon has mass, so it does have gravity. That is why people can walk on the Moon and not go off into space. The Moon's force of gravity (1.6m/sec2) is just 1/6 of the Earth's (9.81 meters/sec2) because the Moon is not as massive as the Earth. The lower force of gravity means that when the astronauts walked on the moon, each step was more like a large bounce !