I don't think there is one.
It is both. All planets have mass.
Mars is 0.107 times the mass of earth. The reciprocal of that is the number of planets the mass of Mars it would take to equal a planet the mass of earth, or a little over 9 and 1/3.
Jupiter is the largest planet, its volume is greater than all of the other planets combined.
The gravitational force on an object at a standard distance is proportional to the mass of the planet.
The gravitational force on an object at a standard distance is proportional to the mass of the planet.
Jupiter is the planet in our solar system with greater mass than the combined mass of all the other planets and their moons.
Gravity differs on different planets because it is determined by the mass of the planet. The larger the mass, the stronger the gravitational pull. Each planet has a unique mass and size, resulting in different levels of gravity on each planet.
All mass produces a gravity field. All planets have mass. Therefore all planets have gravity.
Jupiter is the outer planet with a mass that is more than twice the total mass of all the other outer planets combined.
It would depend on the mass of the planets. The surface gravity of a planet is directly proportional to its mass and inversely proportional to the square of its radius. If two planets have the same mass but different sizes, the smaller planet will have stronger gravity because the surface is closer to the center of mass. Conversely, if two planets are of the same size, the one with more mass will have stronger gravity. Since larger planets usually have more mass than smaller ones they usually have stronger gravity, though not always.
Mass does not change with gravity. Weight increases on BIGGER planets and decreases on smaller planets.
the galaxy has difrent kinds of mass arouund each planet depending on what planet you are speaking of, it might be because of mass of the planet or what size a revolution (size of a complete circle) it must make