Nope. Plus it wouldn't be possible due to the fact that the sun or solar is more than 10,000 times bigger than Earth. The bigger something is the bigger the gravatational pull. so lets say you chucked a fat kid into out of space. He would probably have a few astroids orbiting him when he got back becasue he is so massive!
because in the ocean is all around the earth and the moon has a little gravatational pull but its enough to pull the waves and make them bigger (if the moon is on your side of the earth) meanwhile the lake can only be on one side of the earth it does not have enough space to make big waves
No, the earth is bigger than the moon so they don't have the same gravitational pull
Earth exerts a stronger gravitational force than the moon due to its larger mass. The force of gravity is directly proportional to an object's mass, so Earth's greater mass results in a stronger gravitational pull compared to the moon.
Any body bigger than Earth should have a stronger gravitational pull, and vice versa. They do because of their larger size. The core of the planets would be bigger or smaller than Earth.
Neptune is bigger than Earth which means, Neptune has got more gravitational pull than Earth.
There are 8 planets Mercury (smaller than Earth) Venus (smaller than Earth) Earth Mars (smaller than Earth) Jupiter (bigger than Earth) Saturn (bigger than Earth) Uranus (bigger than Earth) Neptune (bigger than Earth) so 3 smaller & 4 bigger than Earth 37.5% smaller than Earth 50% bigger than Earth
Because the sun is way bigger than the earth. And the sun's gravitational pull is way stronger than the earth. So the answer is the sun's gravitational pull. Because without the sun we would be floating lost in space
There are 8 planets Mercury (smaller than Earth) Venus (smaller than Earth) Earth Mars (smaller than Earth) Jupiter (bigger than Earth) Saturn (bigger than Earth) Uranus (bigger than Earth) Neptune (bigger than Earth) so 3 smaller & 4 bigger than Earth 37.5% smaller than Earth 50% bigger than Earth
Earth has the greater gravitational pull. Mars pulls with only about 38% of Earth's gravity.
Jupiter is bigger than earth
Gravity, as far as we can tell, is generated simply by matter making holes and dents in space, thus, the more matter you have, the stronger the gravitational pull. Uranus is MUCH bigger than the earth. I don't know the exact measurement, but it is BIG. So if Uranus is so much bigger than earth, how strong do you think the gravitational pull would be?
the sun because its mass is way bigger than that of earths