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It is each planet's surface gravity.
gravity
yes it has a solid surface due to the gravity affect that pushes on the surface to create more of a packed surface suitable for landing on
The force of gravity on the earth is 9.8 m/s^2
Gravity is strongest at the earths surface because it's atmosphere is v dense and so the force inc.this happens because force is directly proportional to density.
The gravitational field near the "surface" is about 8.69 meters/second2 (= 8.69 newton/kilogram). For comparison, Earth's gravity field near its surface is about 9.82 meters/second2. Please note that the gas planets, including Uranus, don't really have a surface like Earth does.
Uranus's surface gravity is weaker.
The "surface gravity" is less on Uranus.
0.886 of gravity ==
Uranus has a slightly weaker "surface gravity" compared with the Earth.
You can find various estimates for this because the number is not certain. The number I got from NASA's data is about 0.89 times the Earth's gravity.
Gravity, yes. The gravity at the nominal "surface" of Uranus (where pressure is equal to 1 bar) is about 91% of what it is on Earth. Other conditions, though, make Uranus uninhabitable.
It's a bit weaker than Earth's. You can get various estimates, but it's about 10% weaker, roughly.
Uranus.
The pressure of gravity on a surface is(total force of gravity on the surface) divided by (area of the surface)
Sure. The acceleration of gravity at the 'surface' of Uranus is 8.995 m/s2 . . . about 92% of what it is on Earth, and greater than on Mercury, Venus, Mars, Pluto, or the moon.
At the surface, it is 2.64 times its value at the Earth's surface.