Physics, asked by jiya4545, 10 months ago

1
2. Why is the weight of an object on
the moon on its weight on the
earth?​

Answers

Answered by pushpanew28gmailcom
3

Answer:

ok

Explanation:

here's your answer

Mass of the moon is 1/100 times and radius of moon is 1/4 times that of the earth. Therefore, the gravitational attraction on the moon is about one sixth of that on the earth. Hence, the weight of an object on the moon is 1/6 th of the weight on the earth

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Answered by aryan75483
0

Answer:

The mass of the moon is less than that of the earth. So the force exerted by the moon on an object is also less. We = G x mM / R2, where, M is the mass of the earth, and R its radius. ... So a body weighs one sixth on the moon than on the earth, though its mass is the same on the moon as on the earth.

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