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It would be greater.
jupiter
JUPITER
It is estimated that the gravity on Neptune is 12% greater than Earth
The farther a planet is from the sun, the longer it takes to revolve around it.
If you're the same distance from the center of the planet but its mass is greater than earth's mass, then the mutual gravitational force between you and that planet is greater than on earth, and you'll "weigh" more than you do here.
It would be greater.
It would be greater.
It would be greater.
jupiter
Your weight is directly proportional to the mass and gravity of the planet, if the planet has a greater gravity and mass, you will weigh more.
jupiter
jupiter
It's to do with the length of time a planet takes to spin, a planet that spins on its axis faster than the earth will have a shorter apparent day.
If the planet were the same size as Earth but its mass were some percent greater than Earth's mass, then your weight there would be that same percent greater than it is on Earth. A bathroom scale on that planet might not read exactly the number that I have described ... your apparent weight, as displayed by a bathroom scale, would also be influenced somewhat by the planet's rate of rotation, which might be something different from 15° per Earth-hour of time.
JUPITER
It is estimated that the gravity on Neptune is 12% greater than Earth