All planets with more mass than earth have more gravity than it. So all of the gas giants have far more gravity than Earth.
All planets have gravity, not just Earth.
Gravity of any body is directly proportional to its mass,since the mass of earth is greater than that of moon so earth has greater gravity.
No. The gravitational pull at the surface of a planet depends on that planet's mass and radius. Jupiter has the strongest gravity of any planet in the solar system: 2.53 times the surface gravity on Earth. Mercury has the weakest surface gravity at just 37% the gravity on Earth.
The gravity of the earth is pulling it into orbit.
Earth has a much greater mass than Pluto does, and therefore has stronger gravity.
Jupiter and Neptune are the only planets in our Solar System that have more gravity than the Earth. Jupiter's gravity is about 236% that of the Earth, and Neptune's gravity is about 112% that of the Earth. Edit: Because of uncertainties and different definitions you can get data that says Saturn and/or Uranus also have slightly stronger gravity than Earth's.
Earth-Moon GravityThe point at which the gravity of the Earth is counterbalanced by the gravity of the Moon is much closer to the Moon. The stronger gravity of Earth has a greater effect for any given distance.Independent GravityThe Earth's gravity is greater than the Moon's, so the Moon would have a lower escape velocity and a lower possible orbit, even neglecting the fact that it has no atmosphere. Gravity diminishes with distance, so the effective gravity at any given distance from the Moon will be much less than the effective gravity at that distance from the Earth.
Yes, there is. In fact, anything that has mass will have gravity. In the case of Pluto, it has a mass of 0.0125x1024kg, and a force of gravity of 0.58m/s2 (which is about 6% that of Earth's gravity).
It depends but in most cases you would weigh more on a gas planet. While the gas planets have a far greater mass than the terrestrial planets, they also have much larger radii. The strength of the surface gravity of a planet is directly proportional to its mass and inversely proportional to the square of its radius. Three of the four gas planets in the solar system have stronger surface gravity than any of the terrestrial planets. Uranus is the exception. Uranus is about 4 times the radius of Earth and 14.5 times Earth's mass, which gives Uranus a surface gravity 88.6% that of Earth. So you would weigh less on the gas planet Uranus than you would on Earth or Venus, which are terrestrial planets.
Really none, there is no actual planet that has the exact same gravity, some can be close, like saying it Gforce was 2000, and another was 2000, but actually its like 2000.01010203053232 and 2000.21020103020310. Mars and Venus are roughly the same size as earth (and thus have about the same gravity), but I don't think any planet in our solar system is exactly the same as earth. Gravity is determined by mass; the planet in our solar system with a mass closest to earth is Venus. Venus' gravity is 8.87 ms-2 whereas the Earth's gravity is 9.86 ms-2. Mars's gravity is 3.71 ms-2.
The gravity on any planet is generally about the same wherever you go on any planet. However there are always differences depending on where you are. if you are standing on the top of a mountain then the gravitational force below you is big er then it would be if you were standing in a depression. the same rule applies on earth. the influence of body's such as moons and planets also have an effect on the gravity in any given place on a planet.
The greater the product of two masses, and the closer together they are, the greater the force of gravity is between them. There's no limit. On earth, the greatest force of gravity on any object occurs when the object's center of mass is closest to the ground.