As good as. If you weigh 100 lbs on earth, you would weigh 16.54 lbs on the moon. One sixth of 100 equals 16.6666.... Close enough.
The force of gravity on the moon is about one-sixth (1/6) of the force of gravity on Earth.
Jumping on the moon is different from jumping on Earth because the moon has weaker gravity, so you can jump higher and farther. This is because the moon's gravity is about one-sixth of Earth's gravity.
Your weight on the moon is one-sixth (1/6) what it is on earth.
Less gravity means that the force pulling you towards the surface is decreased, resulting in a lower weight relative to what you would experience on Earth. For example, your weight on the moon is about one-sixth of your weight on Earth due to the moon's lower gravity.
Io's gravity is 1.796 m/s2 (0.183 g) If you weighed 100 kg on Earth, you'd weigh 18.3 kg on Io.
Yes, approximately.
The moon has one-sixth the gravity of earth.
The moon's gravity is essentially identical to 100% of the moon's gravity, and results in gravitational forces on its surface that average about 16% of the corresponding forces on the Earth's surface.
One sixth.
The moon's gravity is one-sixth that of the Earth's;
True. Gravity on the moon is about one-sixth that of Earth's gravity.
The force of gravity on the moon is about one-sixth (1/6) of the force of gravity on Earth.
the moon
No, the moon's surface gravity is only one sixth (1/6) of the earth's.
The gravitational force of attraction between the moon and an objecton or near its surface is 0.165 of the force between the Earth and thesame object on or near Earth's surface.
It is because the gravity on the moon is one sixth of the gravity on the Earth
The moons mass is 1/6th the mass of the Earth.