I ran through some calculations and it seems that the height one can jump on the moon is ten fold the height they can jump on the earth. I used the same mass, force, and distance from bending to calculate the jumps on Earth and the moon. Other sources say the jump on the moon should be six-fold...
From my understanding, at an elementary physics level, the height at which we can jump depends on acceleration due to gravity and the initial velocity when we leave the ground. We can calculate our initial velocity by calculating acceleration and using the distance we bend down before jumping to...