The moon has gravity, but it is much weaker than Earth's gravity. Rocks on the moon stay on the surface due to the moon's gravitational pull, which is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity. This weaker gravity allows rocks to stay in place on the moon despite being less massive than on Earth.
umm... no. The moon is about 4 times smaller than the Earth
you can go places better because it don't have much gravity
The moon is not wider than the earth. Therefore, it can not be much wider than the earth.
"The moon has more gravity than the earth." is a question (about the moon and gravity).
better
It's kind of NOT. Just saying...
Observations from Earth-based telescopes are obscured by the atmosphere.
It's true that there is no atmosphere on the moon, so studying the stars with a telescope would in some ways be better as there would no atmospheric effects that you would get from earth based telescopes. It's debatable whether it would be better overall though as it would be rather impractical to put such a lab on the moon.
no
If the moon was bigger than the Earth, than Earth would orbit it and, by our current definitions, it would be a moon.
Earth, by far.
The moon is smaller than earth. The moon is on fourth of Earth, and has less gravity. You would weigh about one sixth on the moon than on the Earth.
umm... no. The moon is about 4 times smaller than the Earth
The moon has gravity, but it is much weaker than Earth's gravity. Rocks on the moon stay on the surface due to the moon's gravitational pull, which is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity. This weaker gravity allows rocks to stay in place on the moon despite being less massive than on Earth.
The moon is very much smaller than the earth. The moon's atmosphere is thinner than the earth's.
you can go places better because it don't have much gravity