The acceleration of gravity on the surface of Mars, and therefore the weight
of objects located there, is about 38% of the corresponding number on the
surface of the Earth, and about 2.3 times the corresponding number on the
surface of the Moon. You're free to describe those numbers using any slippery
ambiguous adjectives you like.
Yes, but gravity is low.
On Mars, there is low gravity, so there you could jump twice as high as you can on Earth. The acceleration due to gravity on mars is 3.71 m/s2, which is 0.379 times that of Earth. (The gravity on Earth is 2.64 times greater than the gravity on Mars.)
Mars has very low gravity which is one of the reasons that man cant go there and that it is red.
Probably, but it is not certain. The surface gravity of Mars is about 38% of what it is on Earth. This would be enough for people to safely move around, but scientists are still not sure if extended stays in such low gravity would be harmful to a person's health.
Mercury & Mars both have surface gravity less than that of Earth. Mars is about 1/3 that of Earth. The surface gravity of Venus is also less, but only very slightly.
The moon has less mass than does Mars and therefore has less gravity at its surface.
The force of gravity on Mars is equal to 3.7m/s2. Mars's force of gravity is therefore 37.8% that of Earth's.
Mars has less gravity.
No. Gravity on Mars is about 38% of what it is on Earth.
No. Surface gravity on Mars is 37.6% (about 3/8) what it is on Earth.
The gravity of Earth is 2.6 times that of Mars.Mars's gravity is 38% of Earth's gravity.
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.