Apollo 14, Edgar Dean Mitchell, D.Sc. was the 6th man on the moon.
No. The weight of any object on the Moon would be about 1/6 the weight on Earth.
Mass is a constant everywhere in the universe. The weight on the moon is about one sixth of the weight on the earth, because the mass of the moon is about one sixth of the mass of the earth reducing the force of gravity.
There is no atmosphere on the moon. The parachute will not open. [The good news is: at one-sixth (1/6) the gravity, you will only hit with one-sixth the force.]
Gravity on the moon is one-sixth of that on Earth, so you will exert less force on the moon.
The moon has one-sixth the gravity of earth.
A person on the moon would weigh only one sixth of what he or she weighs on Earth.
10 pounds. The moon's gravitational acceleration is one sixth that of Earth's. Hence a person who weighed 60 pounds on the Earth would weigh 10 pounds on the moon.
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Ed Mitchell
Europa, Jupiter's sixth moon.
The moon's gravity is one-sixth that of the Earth's;
On the moon you would weigh about on sixth of what you do on Earth.
One sixth.
A person would weigh less on the Moon compared to Pluto because the Moon has less mass and weaker gravity than Pluto. The gravitational pull on Pluto is stronger due to its larger mass, causing a person to weigh more on Pluto than on the Moon.
No. The weight of any object on the Moon would be about 1/6 the weight on Earth.
Very easy. The surface gravity of the moon is about one sixth of what it is on Earth.
Mass is a constant everywhere in the universe. The weight on the moon is about one sixth of the weight on the earth, because the mass of the moon is about one sixth of the mass of the earth reducing the force of gravity.