The force of gravity of the Moon is about 1/6 that of Earth. So on the Moon you would weight about 1/6 of what you weight on Earth.
i do not understand the question do you mean how do i find out my weight if i were to stand on the moon? NONE as the moon has little gravity (i think) or how do people walk on the moon?# there space boots are very heaving although when they walk in them they dont seem that heavy as there is no gravity but the weights in the bootsw drag the perspn down to the surface of the moon hope that helps Lve from Rachel dg101 XxX
The mass of the astronaut remains the same. However, the weight of the astronaut is less on the moon.
Depends on her weight, positioning of the moon and time of the year.
The moon's gravity is 1/6 the force of Earth's gravity, so you would weight 1/6 as much on the moon than on the Earth. For example, if you were 120 kg on Earth, you would be 20 kg on the Moon. (120 / 6 = 20)
Water. There is no drinkable water on the Moon and your weigh you lose over 60 pounds ( I think, sry i didn't research this time. ) which for jenny creig that is awesome.
Monsoon
You weight on the moon is 16.5% of what your weight is on Earth.
Your Weight on the Moon was created in 1994.
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.
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.
weight on earth=x weight on moon=z formula=x divided by 6 = z i think i splaind it right EXAMPLE: weight on moon=weight earth divided by gravity weight on moon=250N divided by 6 weight on moon=41.66. an object that weight 250N on earth, weight 41.66N on moon. A+=6
The weight of a 100kg man on the moon would be approximately 16.5kg, because the moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity.
The direct variation formula for weight on Earth compared to weight on the Moon can be expressed as ( W_m = \frac{1}{6} W_e ), where ( W_m ) is the weight on the Moon and ( W_e ) is the weight on Earth. This indicates that an object's weight on the Moon is one-sixth of its weight on Earth due to the difference in gravitational force. Consequently, if you know an object's weight on Earth, you can easily calculate its weight on the Moon using this formula.
Weight is mass times gravity, and there is less gravity on the moon, therefore you weigh less on the moon.
To find the weight of a student on the Moon, we can use the fact that the Moon's gravity is approximately 1/6th that of Earth's. If the student's weight on Earth is 420 N, their weight on the Moon would be 420 N ÷ 6, which equals 70 N. Therefore, the student's weight on the Moon would be 70 N.
Weight.
You weigh 10 pounds on the Moon.