Your weight is directly proportional to the mass and gravity of the planet, if the planet has a greater gravity and mass, you will weigh more.
Your weight is directly proportional to the mass and gravity of the planet, if the planet has a greater gravity and mass, you will weigh more.
It would be greater.
It would be greater.
It would be greater.
You'r weight would be greater because the more mass the greater the gravitational pull which is what causes weight in the first place
It would be greater in proportion to the difference in mass. The force of gravity is proportional to the product of the 2 masses, and yours didn't change.
it would change becausethere would be no gravity so u would weight less.and on planets like jupitar or uranis..its a gas planet so you wouldn't be able to land.
Jupiter is the planet that can double your weight due to its strong gravitational pull. It has a mass much greater than Earth, making your weight heavier if you were to stand on its surface.
If the planet were the same size as Earth but its mass were some percent greater than Earth's mass, then your weight there would be that same percent greater than it is on Earth. A bathroom scale on that planet might not read exactly the number that I have described ... your apparent weight, as displayed by a bathroom scale, would also be influenced somewhat by the planet's rate of rotation, which might be something different from 15° per Earth-hour of time.
Not while remaining on the surface of this planet. If you go into space, your mass will not change - but your weight will become zero.
The importantidea here is a planet's "surface gravity". That's the measure of the planet's gravitational "pull"at its surface. The larger this number, the heavier the weight ofan object on the surface of the planet. For example, the "surface gravity" on Mars is only 38% of the Earth's. So, if you could be on the surface of Mars, your weight would be 38% of your weight on Earth.
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