Obviously a hamster.
a hamster weighs less than about everything! Boulders, a dog, a foot, a pumpkin, mostly anything.
a blue whalean elephanta humana cata dog
A man that weighs 60 kg on Earth would weigh less on the moon. He would weigh 9.9 kg on the moon.
Mass doesn't depend on gravity whereas weight does. And moon has gravity less than earth so a body weighs less on moon as compared to its weight on earth. But mass remains same.
On the Moon one weighs one-sixth the weight on Earth.
Yes, on the Moon everything weighs 1/6th the weight on 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.
The acceleration of gravity on or near the surface of the moon, and therefore the weight of objects located there, is about 83.5 percent less than on Earth. An object on the surface of the moon weighs about 1/6 of what it weighs on Earth.
The moon weighs approximately 7.35 x 10^22 kilograms.
An astronaut weighs less on the moon because the moon has less mass than Earth, meaning weaker gravitational force. Weight is the result of the gravitational force acting on an object's mass, so with less force on the moon, the astronaut feels lighter.
Not really a scientific question... but here goes: 1 mole is 6.02214179*10^23 Lets assume each elephant weight 5 tons and the moon weighs 7.6*10^22 kilograms. 1 mole of elephants weighs: 5000 kg * 6.02214179*10^23 = 3.011070895*10^27 kilograms. 3.011070895*10^27 kg - 7.6*10^22 kg = 3.010994895*10^27 kg more. To put this number in perspective: 3.011070895*10^27 kg / 7.6*10^22 kg = 39619 So 1 mole of elephants would weigh as much as 39619 moons
No. An object weighs less on the moon than on Earth. This is because the gravity on the moon is much less than that of Earth, so there is less of a force pulling down on an object.