Mars has the lowest surface gravity (0.376g), just a little lower than that of Mercury (0.38g
The moons gravational pull in the earth
Of course it is possible. You exert gravitational pull which is much weaker. A dust particle will exert a pull which is even smaller.
It is never zero. It may get weaker with distance but it is never zero.
The bigger the planet/star the larger the gravational force.
Gravity. The moon orbits the earth because the moon is stuck in earths gravational pull.
You have the same mass anywhere, but you weigh more or less on a planet depending on the gravitaional pull of the planet. The more gravitational pull, the more you weigh. The gravitational pull depends on the size of the planet. The bigger the planet, the more gravitaional pull.
Gravity and mass are intrinsically related. Therefore any object on Earth that has a greater mass than your whole body will exert a greater gravitational pull than your whole body.
The gravitational pull from the planet can determine it.
I don't think so. No official "planet" in the Solar System has such a weak gravity; most of the so-called "extrasolar" planets (i.e., outside our Solar System) are quite a bit more massive than Earth, since such planets are easier to discover.Other dwarf planets in the Solar System may have a weaker gravity, if you want to count those.
No. A planet's gravitational pull is determined by the planet's mass. A planet's orbital speed is determined by the the mass of the Sun and the planet's distance from the Sun.
The planet with the least mass and smallest is Mercury. The planet with the lowest density is Saturn
Saturn is the least dense planet in our solar system.