Yes. Surface gravity on Ceres is about 3% that of Earth.
They would hit the surface together, after a very long time. Gravity on Ceres is pretty light.
One of the largest asteroids, Ceres was discovered in 1801. With its estimated average radius of about 461 km, and its estimated mass of 9.43 x 1020 kg (0.00015 of Earth's mass, 0.0128 of the Moon's mass), the acceleration of gravity on its surface is estimated at 0.27 m/s2, or 2.8% of its value on the Earth's surface. If you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you'll weigh about 4pounds 2.1ounces on Ceres.
ceres has 0 because its a asteroid
Then effects of gravity can be seen easily, but gravity itself is invisible.
Demeter is the Greek equivalent of Ceres, who is a Roman goddess.
Earth has more gravity than Ceres does. Ceres gravity is 3% of that of Earth's.
The gravity of Ceres is 0.27 m/s² or 0.028 g
Ceres has a mean density of about 2.077 g/cm3
Eris: 0.82 ms-2.Ceres: 0.27 ms-2.
About 2.4 kg, the gravity on Ceres is 1/30th that of Earth
The gravity on Ceres - which is a "dwarf planet" or "plutoid" in what is called the asteroid belt - is 3% of Earth's. If the weight of an average man on Earth is 175 pounds, then on Ceres he would weigh 2.25 pounds.
I am not too sure but as soon as I find out, I will write it.
weaker
No. It cannot rain on Ceres because there is no atmosphere.
No. Ceres has no atmosphere and therefore cannot have storms.
The acceleration of gravity on the surface of the dwarf planet Ceres is listed as 0.27 m/s2. That's 2.75% of its value on Earth. If you weigh 200 pounds on Earth, then you would weigh 51/2 pounds on Ceres, not counting all the stuff you'd need to wear just to stay alive there.
The gravitational field at the surface is: For Ceres: 0.28 meters per second squared For Earth: 9.8 meters per second squared