Uranus is one of the four gas giant planets of our solar system, and it is considerably larger than the Earth (although not nearly as large as Jupiter or Saturn, the largest gas giants) and it has a stronger gravitational field than the Earth.
You would feel heavier. The acceleration due to gravity on Uranus is 10.72, while the acceleration due to gravity of Earth is 9.8 m/s2 (or 9.81, it depends on who you ask.).
Estimates of gravity on Uranus range from 86% to 91% of Earth's gravity. Therefore, using 89%, if you weighed 90 lbs on Earth, you would weigh about 80 lbs on Uranus.
No. The gravity of Uranus comes from Uranus's own mass.
Elipson is the brightest ring of uranus...
Uranus's surface gravity is weaker.
Gravity is a correlation of mass. Uranus is many times larger than Earth. Therefore, the gravity on Uranus is much stronger than Earth's gravity.
The gravity on Uranus is weaker than the gravity on earth. There is a small core and a VAST amount of Liquid Hydrogen. The gravity on Uranus is 8.69 m/s squared. The gravity on Earth is 9.807 m/s squared.
The "surface gravity" is less on Uranus.
if we were to be on uranus the gravity would be 89% of what we get on earth.
Gravity, yes. The gravity at the nominal "surface" of Uranus (where pressure is equal to 1 bar) is about 91% of what it is on Earth. Other conditions, though, make Uranus uninhabitable.
Of course. Heavy water ice will sink in light water.
Uranus has a slightly weaker "surface gravity" compared with the Earth.