Yes. Either a room attached to a large centrifuge, or a room with a rocket underneath it. In each case, the appropriate acceleration would have to be applied.
91% of earths gravity.
The Sun's gravity, at its surface, is about 28 times Earth's surface gravity.
The sun gravity is stronger
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.
Approximately 6 times more
Earths surface of gravity is 4.6m/s2 more than moons.
move in 300 times earths gravity
The Sun's gravity is about 28 times stronger than Earth's gravity at the surface of the Earth. However, because the Sun is much farther away than Earth's own radius, its gravitational influence on Earth is significantly weaker compared to Earth's own gravitational pull.
need to re-word that question... makes no sense
Jupiter's surface gravity is 2.639 times as great as Earth's. A person who weighs 200 pounds on Earth would weigh 528 pounds there.
The gravity of Mercury is approximately 38% that of Earths gravity at the surface.Here are some comparisons:A 150 lbs person would weight 57 lbs on Mercury.You would be able to jump about 2.63 times as high on Mercury making a person capable of jumping over their head doing a standard stationary vertical jump.The moon's gravity is 16% of the Earths gravity as opposed to Mercury's 38%
yes u can train any gravity if you do it hard