It would be more proper to ask, "What is the mass of planet Earth?"1 The quick answer to that is: approximately 6,000,000,000,000 ,000,000,000,000 (6E+24) kilograms.
Pluto but if you dont count that as a planet then Mercury.
Jupiter
jupiter
Your mass does not change. Your weight, however, changes in proportion to the gravity of each planet.
No. Your mass will stay the same. Your weight, however, will change in direct proportion to each planet's gravity.
There is no maximum weight that a planet can get to. A planet's weight depends on its mass and the gravity it has.
gravity
Need the starting weight.
Pluto but if you dont count that as a planet then Mercury.
The mass and weight of the object classifies the object as a planet. For example Pluto's mass and weight proved to be too small for a planet therefore, it classifies as a dwarf planet.
Weight is caused by being pulled down by a planet, therefore it changes from planet to planet. When in space we orbit a planet and the acceleration of the orbit counter-acts the weight - resulting in weightlessness.
Jupiter
Jupiter
Mercury is the lightest planet, with a mass of 0.055 that of Earth.
It is not appropriate to talk about a planet's "weight". Rather, you talk about its "mass". In our Solar System, the planets with the greatest mass are (in this order): Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus.
The importantidea here is a planet's "surface gravity". That's the measure of the planet's gravitational "pull"at its surface. The larger this number, the heavier the weight ofan object on the surface of the planet. For example, the "surface gravity" on Mars is only 38% of the Earth's. So, if you could be on the surface of Mars, your weight would be 38% of your weight on Earth.
weight