It doesn't work that way. There is no height at which you magically become weightless.
The gravity on Mars is about 38% of Earth's gravity. Based on this, a person's jumping height would be roughly 2.6 times higher on Mars compared to Earth, assuming all other factors are the same. However, the actual height a person can jump on Mars would still depend on various factors like their strength, agility, and technique.
On Mars, there is low gravity, so there you could jump twice as high as you can on Earth. The acceleration due to gravity on mars is 3.71 m/s2, which is 0.379 times that of Earth. (The gravity on Earth is 2.64 times greater than the gravity on Mars.)
Well if you think about the moon's gravity pulls the water to create tide, then the gravity would be strongest closer to the moon, so then whatever part of the Earth if closest to the moon a high tide will be experienced as will the part of the earth opposite.
The gravity on Saturn is only slightly more than the gravity on Earth. Therefore, a person jumping on Saturn would jump to a similar height as that on Earth.
In short the earth, to go more in depth we have to under stand that the larger an object is the more it affects thing with its gravity however the decreases exponentially the farther away the object it is affecting is so the sun does not noticeably affect a person with it's gravity whereas it is easily seen during the high tide as the sun pulling up with its gravity is what causes the water to rise
The gravity on Mars is about 38% of Earth's gravity. Based on this, a person's jumping height would be roughly 2.6 times higher on Mars compared to Earth, assuming all other factors are the same. However, the actual height a person can jump on Mars would still depend on various factors like their strength, agility, and technique.
yes.
since gravity is inversly proportional to square of radius. Gravity increases with equater to poles. Gravity is high on poles and less on equator
No. The Sun's gravity is the force that makes Earth revolve around it.when two person of high and low power can pull a rope ,high power person remain constant and low power person can start rotating likewise earth and other planet revolve the sun
Pluto's gravity is relatively light. It is less than seven percent of earth's gravity: 0.067g (1.0g is one earth (g)ravity)
The moon's gravity creates high tides and low tides. The moon's gravity pulls the water up and down as it orbits the Earth.
Yes. On the moon you can jump really high and you weigh less because there is less gravity weighing you down.
On Mars, there is low gravity, so there you could jump twice as high as you can on Earth. The acceleration due to gravity on mars is 3.71 m/s2, which is 0.379 times that of Earth. (The gravity on Earth is 2.64 times greater than the gravity on Mars.)
Yes, all objects in the universe have gravity. The gravity on the moon is about 1/6 of the gravity on Earth.
high tidesProbably the most notable affect of the Moon's gravity, here on the Earth, are the tides.
All matter has mass. gravity is the attraction of objects with mass. The mass of the earth is high enough that gravity from the earth pulls the air towards itself.
A person's glucose control is completely unrelated to his specific gravity.