Yes. All planets have gravity.
The gravity of the earth is pulling it into orbit.
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.
The gravity of any body affects all other bodies. In particular the gravity of the Moon creates the tides in bodies of water here on Earth. It also affects our planet's orbit and angle of tilt relative to the plane of its orbit.
All planets have gravity, and will attract other objects. The strength of the attraction is determined by the mass of the planet and the distance to the object.
The answer is actually Jupiter.The acceleration due to gravity is greater on the surface of Jupiter than it isat the surface of any other planet in our solar system (assuming that a surfacecan be defined for each planet).
The gravity on Mars or any other planet pulls you toward the planet's center.
All planets have gravity, not just Earth.
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 the earth is pulling it into orbit.
Because it is far, far larger.
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.
-- There is no such thing as the gravity of all the planets. Each planet has its own number, which is different from any other. -- Gravity can't be described in units of cm.
The acceleration of gravity at the surface of each terrestrial planet is proportional to the mass of each planet and inversely proportional to the square of the planet's radius, with Newton's gravitational proportionality constant, and is not correlated in any way with any characteristic of the planet's atmosphere. In other words: It ain't related.
The gravity of any body affects all other bodies. In particular the gravity of the Moon creates the tides in bodies of water here on Earth. It also affects our planet's orbit and angle of tilt relative to the plane of its orbit.
They all do. Every object in the universe has gravity.
All planets have gravity, and will attract other objects. The strength of the attraction is determined by the mass of the planet and the distance to the object.
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.