The total mass of all the planets, moons and asteroids, etc. is approximately equal to 0.14% of the mass of the Sun. Of that, more than half is the mass of Jupiter.
Answer:because the sun is like a big ball of mass which means that the planets pull the mass from the sun which keeps the planets in their rotation but if there was not mass then all the planets would go on a straight line.
Gravity is a function of mass. All the planets have different mass, so different gravity.
Jupiter has more mass than all the other planets (in the Solar System) together.Jupiter has more mass than all the other planets (in the Solar System) together.Jupiter has more mass than all the other planets (in the Solar System) together.Jupiter has more mass than all the other planets (in the Solar System) together.
There is no average mass because most planets are not alike. Yes, there's is no "average" planet, but there is still a mathematical average value for their mass. Someone might like to do the math.
All planets have mass.
All the planets are made of "matter" and that has "mass".
Mass does not change with gravity. Weight increases on BIGGER planets and decreases on smaller planets.
Planets have gravity because they have mass.
A huge mass of stars and planets is called a galaxy.
Planets with a large amount of mass.
Depends on the mass of the planet, its speed and the mass of the sun. Our planets revolve because they have the right speed and mass to revolve steadily.
Four planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, have mass greater than that of the Earth.
It is both. All planets have mass.
All mass produces a gravity field. All planets have mass. Therefore all planets have gravity.
No. The Jovian planets are much more massive than the terrestrial planets.
Gravity is determined by mass. Everything with mass has gravitational pull (including you). Planets with more mass have higher gravitational pulls