Wow. That is one of the great unanswered questions of Physics. Nobody knows how gravity works. People have, over the centuries, formulated natural laws that describe the behavior of objects under the influence of gravity; Galileo Galilei, Issac Newton, and Albert Einstein for example.
Look it up on wikipedia. Go to http://en.wikipedia.org/, and search for Gravity.
Gravity on the moon is lower than earth since it had lesser mass. The falling object would accelerate at slower speed on the moon compare to earth.
-- The rate of acceleration of an object on the moon is(the net force on the object)/(the object's mass) .-- If the object is falling, with nothing but the force of gravity acting on it, thenits acceleration is 1.623 m/s2 (compared to 9.807 on Earth).
An object on the moon's surface weighs 0.165 as much as it does on the Earth's surface.
The gravity on the Moon is about 1/6th of the gravity on Earth. This means that an object on the Moon would weigh only about 16.5% of its weight on Earth.
The moon's gravity is about 1/6th (16.5%) as strong as Earth's gravity. This means that an object on the moon weighs about 1/6th of what it weighs on Earth.
Gravity on the moon is lower than earth since it had lesser mass. The falling object would accelerate at slower speed on the moon compare to earth.
Gravity is described in terms of the acceleration of an object falling in it. The acceleration of gravity on Earth is 9.807 meters per second2. On the Moon, it's 1.623 meters per second2. Multiply an object's mass by the local acceleration of gravity, and you have the object's weight.
-- The rate of acceleration of an object on the moon is(the net force on the object)/(the object's mass) .-- If the object is falling, with nothing but the force of gravity acting on it, thenits acceleration is 1.623 m/s2 (compared to 9.807 on Earth).
An object on the moon's surface weighs 0.165 as much as it does on the Earth's surface.
The gravity on the Moon is about 1/6th of the gravity on Earth. This means that an object on the Moon would weigh only about 16.5% of its weight on Earth.
The mass of an object would remain the same on the moon as it is on Earth. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, so it does not change with location. However, the weight of the object would be less on the moon due to the moon's lower gravity compared to Earth.
The moon's gravity is about 1/6th (16.5%) as strong as Earth's gravity. This means that an object on the moon weighs about 1/6th of what it weighs on Earth.
The weight of an object on the moon is about 1/6th of its weight on Earth. This is because the moon's gravity is weaker than Earth's gravity. So, if an object weighs 60 pounds on Earth, it would weigh about 10 pounds on the moon.
It is because the gravity on the moon is one sixth of the gravity on the Earth
Any object weighs more on the moon than it does on an asteroid or comet, but less than it weighs on earth ... only about 16% of its earthly weight.
Gravity is determined by the mass of an object. An object with twice the mass will have twice the gravitational pull. Since the moon is much smaller (has a lot less mass) than earth, the gravity on the moon is less than on earth.
False. The Moon is not constantly falling toward the Earth. It is moving in a curved path around the Earth due to its inertia and the force of gravity between the Earth and the Moon.