Density depends on mass and volume. Neither of those quantities changes
when you move to the moon ... (as long as you stay in an environment where
you can survive, like a landing vehicle or a space suit. Exposed to an airless
environment, sad to say you would probably expand like a balloon, meaning
that your volume would increase and your density would decrease, until ...
oh it's too horrible to contemplate.)
The density of water is 1000 kg m-3 The density of the moon is 3346.4 kg m-3 So the density of the moon is 3.3464 times that of water.
The average density of the Moon is about 3.34 grams per cubic centimeter, which is roughly 60% of Earth's average density. This lower density is due to the Moon having a smaller core and less overall mass compared to Earth.
no it is about 1/6 the density of the earth
No, the mass density of an object would not be the same on the moon as on Earth. The mass of the object would remain the same, but since the gravitational pull on the moon is weaker than that on Earth, the volume of the object would decrease on the moon, resulting in a different mass density calculation compared to Earth.
Yes, the Earth's moon is less dense than Mercury. Mercury is one of the densest planets in the solar system, with a density about 5.4 times that of water, whereas the Moon has a density about 3.3 times that of water.
No density stays the same if you go to the moon.
The density I beleive
The moon's average density is about the same as the density of mantle of the Earth.
The density of water is 1000 kg m-3 The density of the moon is 3346.4 kg m-3 So the density of the moon is 3.3464 times that of water.
No. The moon's density is about 61% the density of the Earth.Where you got the figure of "1/80th" is that the moon's mass is about 1/80thas much as Earth's mass.
No
The average density of the Moon is about 3.34 grams per cubic centimeter, which is roughly 60% of Earth's average density. This lower density is due to the Moon having a smaller core and less overall mass compared to Earth.
The average density of the Earth's moon is about 3.34 grams per cubic centimeter, which is roughly 60% of Earth's average density. This lower density suggests that the moon's interior composition is different from Earth's, with a lower proportion of iron and a higher proportion of lighter elements.
Changing the shape CAN change the density. If you change it into a smaller shape, then you increase the density. However the mass will not change.
Density is a physical property.
no it is about 1/6 the density of the earth
Yes. It has no iron core.