Yes, it is significantly less.
The moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's.
Everything has gravity, the bigger it is the more it has. Moons DO have gravity, but it might be less than Earth's.
The moons gravity is a lot lower than the Earths, so the men exploring the lunar surface will weigh a lot less, roughly 1/6th of what they do on earth. This is because the moon has considerably less mass.
The weight of a body is less on the Moon than on Earth because the Moon has less mass than Earth, causing weaker gravitational pull. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object, so lower gravity on the Moon results in less weight for objects.
Less, about 1/6th of Earths.
1. it is 6 times less than gravity on earth 2. 3.
Because the overall mass of the moon is less than the earths mass. The gravity of a body relates to the mass of that body.
The moons gravity is less than that of the earth, since the earths mass is greater than the moons mass. Gravity is related to mass and distance from that mass. The greater the mass, the greater the gravitational field it has.
Mercury's gravity is approx 40% of Earth's.
Earths surface of gravity is 4.6m/s2 more than moons.
Gravity is directly proportional to the mass (weight) of an object. The moon does have less pull of gravity than the Earth, but it has lots more pull of gravity than, say, the 2 moons of Mars.
Yes it does, because the Earth is smaller than Saturn it will have less gravity than Saturn and because Saturn is bigger it will have more gravity