No. The strength of the sun's gravity, the main gravitational body of the solar system, decreases with distance from the sun. Each planet, moon, asteroid, and comet also has gravity, which becomes noticeable when you get close to them.
no. gravity acting on an object depends on the mass of each of the nearby objects. The solar system is not uniform in mass, so gravity is not uniform either.
No. Gravity from any object varies depending on its size and mass.
No. Mercury is the smallest planet in the solar system, with the lowest mass. Mars has a diameter about 1.4 times that of the denser Mercury, giving them roughly the same surface gravity.
Yes, a star system is the same as a solar system.
Mercury is in the same solar system that we are in.
Venus is in the same solar system that we are.
No. Neptune is in the same solar system that we are.
no, it orbits the same sun as us,so we are in the same solar system
they are round, and they are in the same system.
Jupiter and Mercury are in the same solar system that we are. That solar system has 1 star: the sun.
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 planets, moon, asteroids, and comets that comprise the Solar System are those that were formed from the interstellar dust that fell into the Sun's gravity well. As such, they are considered part of the Sun's family.Actually, the Sun was also formed from that same interstellar dust, so the "family", so to speak, is all of the dust that came together, in one form or another, from the effects of gravity.