Neptune has slightly more gravity than Earth. It is believed that the gravity is 17% greater than Earth's.
Neptune has much more mass than Earth with a mass of 17 times the mass of the Earth. Also, the diameter of Neptune is 3.8 times the diameter of Earth. This brings the gravity on Neptune up to 114% of the gravity of Earth.
about 12% more
because neptune has more gravity than earth, so, idf you were to go there, the atmosphere of mathane, hydrogen, and helium would puch down on you and you would weigh more.
Jupiter and Neptune are the only planets in our Solar System that have more gravity than the Earth. Jupiter's gravity is about 236% that of the Earth, and Neptune's gravity is about 112% that of the Earth. Edit: Because of uncertainties and different definitions you can get data that says Saturn and/or Uranus also have slightly stronger gravity than Earth's.
Surprisingly the gravity at Neptune's nominal "surface" is only 14% greater than it is on Earth. This is because, while Neptune is 17 times more massive than Earth, it is also nearly 4 times Earth's diameter, putting the "surface" farther from the center of mass.
Neptune has much more mass than Earth with a mass of 17 times the mass of the Earth. Also, the diameter of Neptune is 3.8 times the diameter of Earth. This brings the gravity on Neptune up to 114% of the gravity of Earth.
yes
about 12% more
Everything has gravity. Some examples include: every planet every star every moon every fish every speck of dust every drop of beer every shred of lint
If Neptune had a solid surface, it would have slightly more gravity at that point than on the surface of the Earth. But it is a gas giant, with a deep atmosphere that becomes crushingly dense and incredibly hot as you near the rocky core. At the point where the atmospheric pressure is equal to the sea level pressure of Earth, the gravitational attraction is about 14% more than on Earth, and the associated acceleration would be about 12% more. Neptune has 17 times the mass of Earth, but the location of this measurement is more than 20,000 km from its center, and gravity decreases as you move farther from the center of mass.
because neptune has more gravity than earth, so, idf you were to go there, the atmosphere of mathane, hydrogen, and helium would puch down on you and you would weigh more.
Jupiter and Neptune are the only planets in our Solar System that have more gravity than the Earth. Jupiter's gravity is about 236% that of the Earth, and Neptune's gravity is about 112% that of the Earth. Edit: Because of uncertainties and different definitions you can get data that says Saturn and/or Uranus also have slightly stronger gravity than Earth's.
Jupiters gravity is much more than on the earth!
There is more gravity on Saturn
No. Neptune is far more massive than Earth, but its lower density also gives it a much greater radius. As a result, gravity at Neptune's "surface" (defined as where pressure is 1 bar) is about 14% greater than it is on Earth.
There is much less gravity on Mercury.
Earth is hafly big, so it has gravity. Larger, it has more gravity. Smaller, it has less gravity.