Water.
The substance on Earth that experiences the greatest gravitational pull from the moon is the oceans. The moon's gravitational pull causes the tides as it attracts the water on Earth's surface towards it.
The gravitational pull of the Moon has the greatest influence on the Earth's tides but the Sun also has some effect.
On Earth it's the moon.
The gravity of the moon has the greatest pull on Earth itself due to their close proximity and large mass. However, the moon's gravity also affects the oceans, causing tides to rise and fall as the moon orbits Earth.
The moon's gravity exerts that same amount of pull on all substance on Earth, regardless of what it is made of. We observe a greater effect on water because it can flow freely in response to that pull, not because it is pulled with greater force.
Tides are caused by the gravitational pull of the sun and the moon upon the oceans of the earth. The sun has the greatest pull. The tides are greatest during a new moon when the sun and the moon are pulling from the same direction. The side of the earth that faces the sun usually has the high tide, while the side away from the sun has the low tide.
Earth has the greater gravitational pull. Mars pulls with only about 38% of Earth's gravity.
Jupiter has the greatest gravitational pull, if you weigh 100lbs on Earth, you would weigh 253lbs on Jupiter.
The gravitational pull of the moon has the greatest effect on Earth tides. The moon's gravitational force causes bulges in the Earth's oceans, creating high and low tides as the Earth rotates. Other factors, such as the sun's gravity and the shape of the coastline, also play a role in affecting tides.
There is a just as equal pull from the Earth to the sun.
The earth's pull on objects is the force of gravity.
The further from the earth that you are the less gravity acts on you. This is because the object with the greatest mass in this case the earth pulls you to it. This is why when you drop a pencil it falls to the floor instead of flyin back to your hand.