everywhere in the universe
The gravity of Earth is 2.6 times that of Mars.Mars's gravity is 38% of Earth's gravity.
If the gravity of the Earth was 0, the law of uniformity would mean that gravity everywhere else in the universe would also be 0 and it therefore could not exist. If you somehow managed to make just the Earth's gravity 0 the planet would fly apart as a result of the centrifugal force of its spin and the Moon would fly off and orbit the Sun on its own.
Pluto's force of gravity is equal to 0.58m/s2, whereas the force of gravity on Earth is 9.81m/s2. Thus, the gravity on Pluto is about 6% that of the gravity on Earth.
It has 252.8% of earth's gravity.
No. Gravity on Mars is about 38% of what it is on Earth.
Yes, and everywhere else, too - gravity operates everywhere.
Same as everything else .. Gravity
Where else would it be? The atmosphere is a compilation of gasses held to the Earth by gravity.
Weight (on Earth) or Mass (everyplace else)
There is gravity everywhere in Creation. It causes a force between every two bits of mass in the universe.
Nothing happens to gravity. It remains the same as it is everywhere else on earth.
No, gravity is not a type of Matter; This is a force that the earth exerts to the objects under it's range.
The gravity of Earth is 2.6 times that of Mars.Mars's gravity is 38% of Earth's gravity.
A desk or anything else would still weigh the same, but the Moon's gravity is only one-sixth of the Earth's gravity.
No. The earth has its own gravity. The lunar gravity causes tides on earth, but does not control earth's gravity.
No - the gravity of Earth is due to its mass.No - the gravity of Earth is due to its mass.No - the gravity of Earth is due to its mass.No - the gravity of Earth is due to its mass.
It will pull water down, just as it will pull anything else down, and just as on Earth.