Slightly less. If you weighed 200 kg on Earth, you would only weigh 181.5 kg on Venus.
See link for planet weight comparison.
Venus is slightly smaller and less dense than the Earth is, so it has lower surface gravity.
This question is harder than it might seem. The answer is: You would weigh less on both Venus and Mars. You would weigh more on Jupiter. As regards Saturn, you could weigh more or less depending where on the planet you were. For example, at Saturn's equator the effect of the planet's rotation would be enough to reduce your effective weight to less than your Earth weight.
9.7% less than you weigh on Earth, 138% more than you weigh on Mars.
Because Venus orbits the sun in less time than earth. YES, but why is that? Here's the answer: Venus is closer to the Sun than the Earth. So it has a smaller orbit and its moving more quickly.
Nothing. More - the sun, Jupiter. Less - the moon, Venus.
The gravity on Venus is about 9/10 that of Earth. So, a 100 lb. object on Venus would weigh a little more (more like a few tenths) than 111 lbs.
You will have less weight on the Moon than on Earth (83.3% less), but your mass will remain unaffected. If you weigh 150lbs on Earth, then you would weigh only 26.55lbs on the Moon.
You would weigh less
A year on Venus is 224 Earth days and a day is 243 Earth days. This answer isn't bad, but remember the Solar day is "only" about 117 Earth days on Venus. I like the Solar day. It takes Venus about 243 Earth days to rotate once and that's what is called a Sidereal day.
The mass will definitely weigh less as the moon is less massive than the Earth and hence the Gravity of the Moon will be lesser than Earth. The object's weight will be 1/6 times that on Earth.
Yes, almost! The gravity on Venus is about 90.5% of the gravity on the earth. A person weighing 100 lbs on the earth would only weigh 90.5 lbs on Venus. However, it might be worth noting, before you plan your next vacation, that the air on Venus is deadly poisonous (sulfuric acid and carbon dioxide), and the temperature is 450oC, well above the boiling point of water! Venus is smaller than the earth, and less dense, so the gravity is less than that on the earth. As you know, gravity accelerates the speed and distance of a falling object. The pull of gravity is measured in meters per second, squared (m/s2). This means that things fall faster and faster every second after falling from a stationary position. Gravity, at the equator:Venus: 8.87 m/s2,Earth: 9.780327 m/s2.Conclusion:Gravity on Venus is less than on the Earth.See Related Links below for more information.
Less, because the pull of gravity is weaker than on earth