3.7 N/kg = 3.7 m/s/s OR 3.7 m/s^2 all the same thing.
All objects with mass have gravity, so all planets have gravity. However, the strength of gravity depends on the mass of the planet. Earth's gravity is strong enough to hold objects to its surface, which is why we feel it as weight.
If we consider classical physics (Newtonian explanations) the source is unaffected. The strength of the gravitational pull decreases as the second power of the distance.
Gravity depends on the mass of an object. Weight, on the other hand, is the force of gravity acting on an object's mass. So, weight depends on both an object's mass and the strength of gravity acting on it.
Yes, gravity is a fundamental force that exists throughout the universe, including other galaxies. The strength of gravity depends on the mass of an object, so larger galaxies will have stronger gravitational fields.
plutos gravity is about 1/15th that of Earth. If you weighed 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh about 6 1/2 pounds on Pluto.
mass is the amount of matter that something has, not affected by gravity. Gravity is a force or traction. Lastly weight is the force of gravity pulling on an object or a mass
Every speck of mass in the universe has 'gravity power'. The strength of the sun's gravity and the strength of the gravity of the lint in your shirt pocket can be calculated with exactly the same simple formula.
plutos core kills us from coldness
Yes. Charon, Plutos largest moon, is about 1200km in diameter, while Plutos diameter is around 2322km, so Plutos diameter is about twice the size. In terms of volume though, Pluto is around 7.4 times as big.
No mass is not affected by gravity, weight is.
It doesn't. Mass and distance affects the force of gravity.
on chet
Monkeys
No. The strength of gravity on Mars is less than half of that on Earth.
No. The strength of gravity on a planet depends on its size and mass.
Size does not but mass does.