No. The gravity of Uranus comes from Uranus's own mass.
if we were to be on uranus the gravity would be 89% of what we get on earth.
Uranus's surface gravity is weaker.
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.
Because of gravity and inertia (;
The only reason would be gravity.
No. The gravity of Uranus comes from Uranus's own mass.
if we were to be on uranus the gravity would be 89% of what we get on earth.
Uranus's surface gravity is weaker.
The "surface gravity" is less on Uranus.
The gravity on Uranus is weaker than the gravity on earth. There is a small core and a VAST amount of Liquid Hydrogen. The gravity on Uranus is 8.69 m/s squared. The gravity on Earth is 9.807 m/s squared.
Gravity, yes. The gravity at the nominal "surface" of Uranus (where pressure is equal to 1 bar) is about 91% of what it is on Earth. Other conditions, though, make Uranus uninhabitable.
Uranus has a slightly weaker "surface gravity" compared with the Earth.
Yes, it has more gravity than Earth!
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.
no, it's only 86% of the gravity on Earth
Yes. Gravity affects EVERYTHING.