It reduces to one sixth of it's earth weight.
you dont have weight on the moon !
Your weight . . . the weight of anything on Luna, our moon, is a sixth of its weight on Earth.
Nothing happens to the weight of an object on the moon. It remains constant, at about 16% of what the same object weighs when it's on the Earth.
An object weighs less on the moon compared to Earth because the moon has lower gravity. The gravitational pull on the moon is about 1/6th that of Earth, so a person or object would weigh approximately 1/6th of their weight on the moon.
It forms a crater or dint.
The weight of a moon buggy on the moon would be one-sixth of its weight on Earth. This is due to the moon's lower gravity compared to Earth, which exerts less downward force on objects.
Objects on the moon experience lower gravity compared to Earth, which means they weigh less and have less inertia. As a result, they can be moved more easily and fall more slowly. Additionally, objects on the moon are exposed to extreme temperature variations, radiation, and micrometeoroids due to the lack of atmosphere.
Because the force of gravity exerting on objects on the moon is much lower than that of the earth.
Anything is about 17 percent its Earth weight if on the moon. For example, if 60 pounds on Earth, it is 10 pounds on the moon. Mass of two objects that are near each other causes weight, so the bigger the objects, the more the force of gravity.
Gravity on the moon is one-sixth of that on Earth, so you will exert less force on the moon.
Yes, on the Moon everything weighs 1/6th the weight on Earth.
For astronomical objects, it is more appropriate to talk about the mass of an object, not about its weight. The Moon has a mass of 7.35 x 1022 kilogram, that is about 1.2% of Earth's mass.