The moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's.
It has about 9/10 of earths gravity.
It has much weaker gravity.
Gravity is a correlation of mass. Uranus is many times larger than Earth. Therefore, the gravity on Uranus is much stronger than Earth's gravity.
The moon has plenty of gravity. In accordance with its mass and radius, any object weighs about 16.5% as much on the moon's surface as it does on the Earth's surface.
No. While the gravity of Jupiter is much stronger than Earth's it is nowhere near as strong as that of a black hole.
Earths surface of gravity is 4.6m/s2 more than moons.
Weaker, much weaker.
Your would weigh 1/6th as much as you do here on mother Earth. The how is our moons' mass, and therefore its' gravity, is about 1/6 as much as the Earths'. Its' gravity well is not as deep as the Earths.
jupiter has about 2.5 times the gravity of earth therefore the acceleration due to gravity is 26 m/s/s.
Food, water, air, shelter, and anti gravity. Saturns gravity is much stronger than Earths; it would crush you.
Planet Mercury and Planet Earth are both rocky planets. But Mercury is much smaller than Earth, so has much less force of gravity. Your answer is "No".
The gas planets are much more massive than the terrestrial planets and therefore have stronger gravity. It is believed that as they formed many of their moons formed around them much like the planets formed around the sun. Other moons are likely captured asteroids and comets.
Of the planets in our solar system, Mars has the lowest surface gravity of around 38% of earths - over one third. This comes closest to the 25%. We then have moons and dwarf planets, but these have much lower surface gravities.
It has about 9/10 of earths gravity.
The Sun has a gravity of 27.94 g whereas the Earth has a gravity of 0.99732 g about 28 times more than the Earth.
No, Its gravity is much lower due to a lower overall mass of the planet. Mars' gravity is about 37.6% of the Earths.
The moon's gravity is one-sixth that of the Earth's;