Yes! Anything that has mass has gravity. The more mass something has (the bigger it is), then the more gravity it will have. So everything around us (including all the planets) have gravity! Even people have gravity...it's just that people are so small that there's not enough gravity to matter. Even the biggest building on the Earth is too small to have enough gravity for you to notice it. But since planets are /really/ big, they have enough gravity to hold things down.
Answer: No. It is impossible for a planet to have zero gravity. It can have lower or higher gravity that Earth, but it would not exist if there was no gravitational pull to keep it together. no, everything with mass has gravity, even people. you right now are displacing space and time and therefore have gravity, attracting things around you. Granted its an incredibly small amount of gravity but its still there.
Yes. All planets have gravity because all planets have mass. Anything that has mass, has gravity.
there is otherwise we'd fly away as soon we go on the planets.
if that planet is having mass then it is having or in better words creating the curve of its mass w.r.t. time within certain area called field and hence creates gravity.
All the planets, and all objects that have mass, have their own gravity.
Mutual gravitational forces exist between every pair of particles of mass in the universe.
All planets have gravity.
Yes they do. All mass has gravity.
Yes. All planets have gravity.
The planet that has the largest acceleration of gravity is Jupiter. The planet with the least amount of gravity is Mercury. Actually, Pluto has less gravity than Mercury, but Pluto is not classified as a planet any more.
Io is a moon of Jupiter, not a planet. Surface gravity is about 18% of the gravity on Earth.
The gravity on any planet is generally about the same wherever you go on any planet. However there are always differences depending on where you are. if you are standing on the top of a mountain then the gravitational force below you is big er then it would be if you were standing in a depression. the same rule applies on earth. the influence of body's such as moons and planets also have an effect on the gravity in any given place on a planet.
Gravity depends largely on mass, the bigger the planet the greater the gravity should be
The gravity on Mars or any other planet pulls you toward the planet's center.
Yes. All planets have gravity.
The planet that has the largest acceleration of gravity is Jupiter. The planet with the least amount of gravity is Mercury. Actually, Pluto has less gravity than Mercury, but Pluto is not classified as a planet any more.
All planets have gravity, not just Earth.
No. All planets have gravity. Any object massive enough to be considered a planet would have strong enough gravity that you could simply escape by jumping. It is, however, possible for an object to escape the gravity of any planet if it is launched in the right way and with enough speed.
No. The gravitational pull at the surface of a planet depends on that planet's mass and radius. Jupiter has the strongest gravity of any planet in the solar system: 2.53 times the surface gravity on Earth. Mercury has the weakest surface gravity at just 37% the gravity on Earth.
The gravity of a planet does not hold it in place, nor does any planet stay still. The planets are in constant motion as they orbit the sun.
Gravity is an attractive force that occurs between all objects with mass. The gravity of any planet will pull objects in.
no, because it has no gravity and the temperature is extremly cold
Io is a moon of Jupiter, not a planet. Surface gravity is about 18% of the gravity on Earth.
Gravity comes with mass so since a planet has mass there is some gravity. the bigger the planet the more mass it has. smaller planets have less gravity. so either way there is always some gravity on a planet.
Yes, there is. In fact, anything that has mass will have gravity. In the case of Pluto, it has a mass of 0.0125x1024kg, and a force of gravity of 0.58m/s2 (which is about 6% that of Earth's gravity).