Your mass is the same wherever you go.
You weigh more on the Earth, because your weight depends on your own mass
and on the mass that's attracting you to it, and Earth's mass is about 80 times
more than the moon's mass.
The mass of the Earth is six times more than the moon.
Size: The Moon has about 1/4 of the diameter of Earth. Mass: The Moon has about 1/81 of the mass of Earth.
For astronomical objects, it is more appropriate to talk about the mass of an object, not about its weight. The Moon has a mass of 7.35 x 1022 kilogram, that is about 1.2% of Earth's mass.
No; the Earth has over eighty times the mass of the Moon. Our Moon is overall about three fifths the density of the Earth; which is itself a scientific curiosity since this would mean the lunar core has an unusually low density.
No, the moon does not have more gravitational attraction than Earth. In fact, Earth's gravitational pull is significantly stronger due to its larger mass. The moon's gravity is about one-sixth that of Earth's, which is why objects weigh much less on the moon compared to Earth.
No. The earth's mass is equal to about 82 times the moon's mass. (Moon's mass is equal to about 1.2% of the earth's mass.)
The mass of the Earth is six times more than the moon.
Because earth contains more matter as compared to moon.
The distance from the center of mass to Earth, times the mass of the Earth, must be equal to the distance of the center of mass to the Moon, times the mass of the Moon. (For more than 2 objects, the calculation is somewhat more complicated - reading about "center of mass" can give you an idea.)The distance from the center of mass to Earth, times the mass of the Earth, must be equal to the distance of the center of mass to the Moon, times the mass of the Moon. (For more than 2 objects, the calculation is somewhat more complicated - reading about "center of mass" can give you an idea.)The distance from the center of mass to Earth, times the mass of the Earth, must be equal to the distance of the center of mass to the Moon, times the mass of the Moon. (For more than 2 objects, the calculation is somewhat more complicated - reading about "center of mass" can give you an idea.)The distance from the center of mass to Earth, times the mass of the Earth, must be equal to the distance of the center of mass to the Moon, times the mass of the Moon. (For more than 2 objects, the calculation is somewhat more complicated - reading about "center of mass" can give you an idea.)
yes
No. Earth is about 80 times more massive than the moon.
Yes, the Moon has about 1/81 of the Earth's mass.
1 earth mass = 81.78 moon mass (rounded)1 moon mass = 0.01223 earth mass = 1.223% of earth mass (rounded)The mass of the moon is only 1.2 percent of the mass of Earth.
a rock in earth
There is no such thing as weight in space as there is no gravity up there. Although seeing as the earth has more mass it would weigh more if there where gravity in space.
The 10N object has the same mass whether on the moon or on Earth. Mass is an intrinsic property of an object that does not change with location. However, the weight of the object would be lower on the moon due to the moon's weaker gravity compared to Earth.
No. The mass of the moon is a fraction of the earth's mass.