If you're Matthew Bellamy, then yes. If not, no.
You would weigh less on Mercury than on Earth due to its lower gravity. Mercury's gravity is about 38% of Earth's gravity.
The gravity on Mercury is 38% of Earth's gravity. So, if you were 150mlbs on Earth, you would be 57 lbs on Mercury.
There would be less gravity on earth.
No. The gravity of Pluto is only about 6.3% of the gravity on Earth, less than half of the gravity on the moon. This is because Pluto is about 500 times less massive than Earth.
Mars does not have extreme gravity! It is less than 40% of the earth's gravity.
On the moon, gravity is about 1/6th of the gravity on Earth. Therefore, if you weigh 100lbs on Earth, you would weigh approximately 16.6lbs on the moon. This is because the force of gravity pulling you toward the moon is much weaker compared to the force of gravity pulling you toward Earth.
Mercury has less gravity, so objects on Mercury would weigh less than they would on Earth
Mars has weaker gravity than Earth. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of the gravity on Earth. This means that objects on Mars weigh less than they would on Earth.
Mars is a lot less massive than Earth. Therefore gravity is less than you would experience on Earth. Gravity on Mars is about 38% that of what you experience on Earth. Therefore is you weigh 100kg on Earth, you would only weigh 38kg on Mars.
You would weigh less on the moon compared to Earth due to the weaker gravity. The gravitational pull is about 0.17 times on the moon compared to Earth, so your weight would be significantly lower on the moon than on Earth.
No. The gravity on Mercury is less than half that of Earth.
The gravity on Mercury is about 38% of Earth's gravity. This means that objects on Mercury weigh less than they would on Earth. The weaker gravity is due to Mercury's smaller mass and size compared to Earth.