Jupiter - 88,700 miles (142,800 km) in diameter
Saturn - 74,898 miles (120,536 km) in diameter
Uranus - 31,690 miles (51,118 km) in diameter
Neptune - 30,775 miles (49,528 km) in diameter: NEPTUNE IS THE 4th BIGGEST.
Earth - 7,926 miles (12,756 km) in diameter
Venus - 7,521 miles (12,104 km) in diameter
Mars - 4,222 miles (6790 km) in diameter
Mercury - 3,031 miles (4,878km) in diameter
Pluto - 1,413 miles (2274 km) in diameter
:)
The radius of Pluto is 1,195 km .... or 0.19 Earths (about one fifth)
The volume of Pluto is 7.15×109 km³ ... or 0.0066 Earths --> it would take 151.5 Plutos to make up the volume of Earth.
weight=mass X gravitational field
Mercury - 3.7
Venus - 8.8
Earth - 9.8
Mars - 3.7
Jupiter - 23.2
Saturn - 9.0
Uranus - 8.7
Neptune - 11.1
Pluto - 0.6
Neptune is about 3.88 times larger than the Earth, so about 58.5 Earths could fit inside Neptune.
On Neptune's surface the pull would be about 1.14 times that on the Earth's surface, or an acceleration of about 11.15 meters per second squared.
Neptune's diameter is nearly four times the diameter of earth. The diameter at the equator of Neptune is 49,520 km, and of earth is 12,756 km.
if you way 100 pds on erth you way 13 pds on neptune
Im not exactly sure of Earth's relative size, however, I do know its diameter: 7,918 miles or 12,740 km. Hope that helps, cuz if it doesn't, ur screwed.
1.19 times the gravitational pull on Earth
Comparing Neptune to Earth, the planet Neptune has a larger gravitational pull the the Earth. It is about 14% larger in comparison to the Earth's gravitational pull.
Jupiter and Neptune.
Yes, the planet Neptune's gravitational pull is greater than Earth's, because the force exerted is proportional to mass, and Neptune's mass is over 17 times the mass of Earth. Because gravity evidences an inverse square law, we feel the gravitational pull on Earth much more strongly. On the surface (roughly at the outer limit of the atmosphere) of Neptune, however, because of the size of the planet and the distance from its center of gravity, you would only weigh slightly more than on Earth's surface, somewhere around 13% more.
neptune's surface gravity is 1.14 times stronger than that of earth...but it is a planet made by gas..so you won't feel this gravity as you will sink in through gaseous layer
No, the strength of gravitation attraction between two celestial bodies depends on their masses and the distance between them. The Sun has a much larger mass than Neptune, so it exerts a stronger gravitational force on the planet. However, the distance between the Sun and Neptune is much greater than the distance between the Sun and Earth, so the gravitational force between the Sun and Neptune is weaker than the force between the Sun and Earth.
It has a much weaker gravitational pull than Earth. Earth's pull is about 9.81 m/s^2 at sea level, while Haumea's is about 0.63m/s^2, or roughly one fifteenth of that on Earth.
it is stronger
weaker
It isn't clear what you mean with "stronger or weaker". Neptune's gravity is stronger than that of Earth, if that's what you mean, since Neptune has a larger mass.
It is stronger on Neptune.
yes
Neptune's gravity is stronger, and is equal to 11m/s2.
weaker, since the moon is smaller
It would be weaker.
About 17 percent stronger (it's more massive).
Jupiter and Neptune.
Gravitational force of the moon is 1/6th the gravitational force of the Earth. The larger the object, the greater gravitational force it will have.
Yes, the planet Neptune's gravitational pull is greater than Earth's, because the force exerted is proportional to mass, and Neptune's mass is over 17 times the mass of Earth. Because gravity evidences an inverse square law, we feel the gravitational pull on Earth much more strongly. On the surface (roughly at the outer limit of the atmosphere) of Neptune, however, because of the size of the planet and the distance from its center of gravity, you would only weigh slightly more than on Earth's surface, somewhere around 13% more.