None of the planets that scientist know is exactly 15 times more massive than earth, but the closet one is Saturn, it is 18 times more bigger than earth,
Hi everyone I know how irritating it is for you trying to find answers to questions online especially if your a high school girl like mwa so the answer is Saturn or Uranus Saturn is more closer to 15
None of the planets that scientist know is exactly 15 times more massive than earth, but the closet one is Saturn, it is 18 times more bigger than earth,
Jupiter's diameter 11 times as great at that of Earth. Jupiter's volume is equal to 1,317 Earths. Jupiter is 318 times as massive as Earth. Jupiter is two and a half times as massive as all of the other planets in our Solar System combined.
Jupiter, its more massive.
Yes, the Moon has about 1/81 of the Earth's mass.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar System. There are many larger planets outside of the Solar System but it's the largest in THIS solar system.Recently discovered "exoplanets", planets orbiting other stars, range in size from fairly large to positively enormous. (Our sensors are not yet good enough to detect Earth-sized planets around other stars, but soon, soon..... ) The biggest are up to 50 times more massive than Jupiter, the point at which a massive body becomes massive enough to cause nuclear fusion - and becomes a tiny star.Yes it's the biggest. Even if it is a gas planet.Yes. Jupiter is a medium-sized gas giant, the largest planet in our solar system. It is more than twice as massive as the next-largest planet, Saturn, and is more than 3000 times Earth's mass. However, it is still about 1/1000 the mass of the sun.
Uranus
Uranus
The Sun is not a planet, it is a Star. It is 332,946 times more massive than the Earth.
None of the planets that scientist know is exactly 15 times more massive than earth, but the closet one is Saturn, it is 18 times more bigger than earth,
The moon and the planet it orbits that have the highest ratio of their masses are Earth's moon and Earth. The earth is only about 81 times as massive as its moon. In the #2 planet/moon mass ratio among the eight planets, Saturn is 4226 times as massive at Titan.
Earth just slightly but earth
Earth
Jupiter, with a mass over 300 times that of Earth, fits this criterion.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_mass
Mercury, which is over twenty times the mass of (minor planet) Pluto.
More massive planets have more gravitational pull. If a satellite were to pass by Earth and Jupiter at the same distance from each planet, the satellite would be more attracted to start orbiting Jupiter because of its pull. The more massive a planet is the more likely it is to get a satellite to orbit it.
Earth is a about 6 times more massive than the moon (Has more density per volume, since it's technically weightless in space) Gravity is proportional to how large a planet or moon is, so the object will be heavier on earth (a larger planet) than on the moon (a small body)
There is no direct connection between the mass of a planet and the number of moons it has. Mars is less massive than Earth but has twice as many moons as does Earth. Jupiter is more massive than either Mars of Earth and has many more moons that either of them.