There is gravity on the moon. It has its own gravity. It's not as strong because it has less mass. In fact, we have our own gravity. It's just tiny.
Just because you are inside earth's most thin atmosphere which extends 15-100 earth doesn't mean you have not left earth. If someone farts and another person smells it, does that mean they are now touching the farter? no. If you manage to touch a comet's gas tail does not mean you are now in or on the comet. And why does it matter? How thin would the atmosphere need to be for you to say we are outside of earth? some oxygen may escape and reach Jupiter, is Jupiter now inside the earth? Stop playing simantics.
You don't need a human to bounce around the moon to know there is gravity. A robot kicking dust, all the rocks that you can see are all evidence of gravity. With a telescope, you can see other planets have moons too. so those planets have a gravitational pull.
There is gravity on the moon. It has its own gravity. It's not as strong because it has less mass. In fact, we have our own gravity. It's just tiny. Just because you are inside earth's most thin atmosphere which extends 15-100 earth doesn't mean you have not left earth. If someone farts and another person smells it, does that mean they are now touching the farter? no. If you manage to touch a comet's gas tail does not mean you are now in or on the comet. And why does it matter? How thin would the atmosphere need to be for you to say we are outside of earth? some oxygen may escape and reach Jupiter, is Jupiter now inside the earth? Stop playing simantics.
anything with mass has a gravitational pull. That's just the way it is.
Exactly. Even we have a pull, it's just that we don't have much mass so our pull is tiny.
You don't need a human to bounce around the moon to know there is gravity. A robot kicking dust, all the rocks that you can see are all evidence of gravity. With a telescope, you can see other planets have moons too. so those planets have a gravitational pull.