An object on the Moon's surface weighs 16.55% as much as the same object weighs when it's on the Earth's surface. The fraction is roughly 1/6.
The moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's.
There is no atmosphere on the moon. There is insufficient gravity to keep an atmosphere there.
The earth has a colossal size more mass
It is approximately 1/6.
The moons gravity 'pulls' the earths water creating a 'tide.'
We are not sure. try looking it up on a different website
About 0.183g, where one g is the earths gravity, so about one fifth of the earths gravity. It is similar to our own moons surface gravity.
An object on the Moon's surface weighs 16.55% as much as the same object weighs when it's on the Earth's surface. The fraction is roughly 1/6.
Earths gravity keeps the moon from flying off in the same way the sun keeps earth in balance.
Your would weigh 1/6th as much as you do here on mother Earth. The how is our moons' mass, and therefore its' gravity, is about 1/6 as much as the Earths'. Its' gravity well is not as deep as the Earths.
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.
Earths surface of gravity is 4.6m/s2 more than moons.