This question is probably about the strength of the "surface gravity" of the planets. "Jupiter" is the obvious answer. It has a surface gravity about 2.5 times Earth's. Neptune also has a higher surface gravity than Earth.
(Sometimes Saturn is given as another example, but it depends on the
exact definition of "surface gravity".)
Yes, the bigger the planet the more gravity.
No. My planet (and presumably yours as well) is Earth.
All planets with more mass than earth have more gravity than it. So all of the gas giants have far more gravity than Earth.
If you mean gravity,the bigger a planet is, the larger the gravity, so yes,Jupitar has more gravity than earth.
The "surface gravity" is less on Uranus.
I think the planet earth has more gravity
Yes, there is more gravity on Jupiter than on Earth. Jupiter is a much larger and more massive planet than Earth, so it has a stronger gravitational pull. This means that the force of gravity on Jupiter is greater than on Earth.
All of them do. There's no planet where the gravity is the same as on Earth.
More Mass = Greater "surfacegravity".But also alarger diameter = Less "surface gravity".So, for example, if the planet is larger than Earthand has more mass then the gravitational force at its surfacecould be greater or lessthan Earth's.
Earth (by definition has a gravity exerting a pull of 1g. Venus is almost the same as Earth but the pull of gravity there is 0.904g. So Earth has more gravity.
Your weight is directly proportional to the mass and gravity of the planet, if the planet has a greater gravity and mass, you will weigh more.
Jupiter, the biggest planet in the solar system, has far more gravity than the Earth. Only the Sun has more gravity than Jupiter in our solar system.