Input on the Wolfram Alpha website: "gravitational force between Earth and Jupiter"Wolfram Alpha assumes a distance of 5.151 au - that must be the average distance.
Result: 1.278 x 10^18 newton
Compared to the moon, it's pretty strong. Compared to Jupiter, it's pretty weak.
gravity on Pluto is about 1/12th the surface gravity on Earth
Because of Earth's size, and considering it as one of the smallest planets, it has a weak gravity compared to the OTHER planets. Most planets have greater gravity because of their size. Earth has a stronger gravity compared to mars, mercury, and venus.
Neptune's gravity is strong, as it is the fourth largest planet in our solar system. Its gravitational force is about 17% stronger than Earth's.
Pluto's gravity is relatively weak compared to the gravity of larger planets like Earth. The gravitational pull on Pluto's surface is about 6% that of Earth's gravity. This means that a person who weighs 100 pounds on Earth would weigh only about 6 pounds on Pluto.
Those words ('strong' and 'weak') don't mean anything unless you explain what you're comparing to. You haven't done that. Comparing the surface of Saturn to the surface of Earth, Saturn comes out about 14% stronger. Comparing the surface of Saturn to the surface of Jupiter, Saturn comes out about 57% weaker.
All objects have gravity. The strength of that gravity is directly proportional to the object's mass. For most objects, their gravity is too weak for us to notice, but Earth has an enormous amount of mass and so has fairly strong gravity.
It's roughly 10% less on the surface of Venus than on Earth's surface.
Earth's gravity is considered strong compared to other celestial bodies within our solar system. It exerts a force of about 9.8 m/s^2, which is sufficient to keep our atmosphere in place and hold everything on Earth's surface.
No. Compared with the other basic forces, gravity is remarkably weak.
If you mean the acceleration due to gravity on the surface, that's about 3.7 meters per second squared; for comparison, gravity on Earth is 9.8 meters per second squared.
Gravity on the sun is incredibly strong because of its massive size and density. The sun's gravity is about 28 times stronger than Earth's gravity. This strong gravitational force is what keeps all the planets in orbit around the sun.