Venus would be the closest.
Mars comes the closest.
1000,0000,00000,00000,00000,000000,00000 times as much you would weigh on planet earth
The Planet Earth is ONE planet.
The gas giant planets outside the orbit of Mars are bigger in size than Earth, because of their enormous atmospheres.They are also much more massive. Jupiter - 318 Earth masses Saturn - 95 Earth masses Uranus - 14.5 Earth masses Neptune - 17 Earth masses
There is no such planet known. In our solar system, the planet whose moon is closest in size to the planet which it orbits is none other than our own planet Earth. However, the Moon is still much smaller than the Earth. Pluto has a Moon that's big, but Pluto isn't a "planet" now, of course.
There is no such planet known. In our solar system, the planet whose moon is closest in size to the planet which it orbits is none other than our own planet Earth. However, the Moon is still much smaller than the Earth. Pluto has a Moon that's big, but Pluto isn't a "planet" now, of course.
Mars weighs 639E21 kg. That is exactly 0.107 in Earth mass. Venus is a planet that weighs as much as Mars. Pluto and other smaller moons weigh close to Mars as well.
The weight of a person is dependent on the gravitational pull of the celestial body they are on. Therefore, if a person weighs 65 pounds on earth, their weight would be different on another planet with a different gravitational force.
By learning its composition and the weight of its elements, and computing them with the volume of space they occupy. The size of a planet can be misleading, as Jupiter is much larger than earth but it weighs very little because it is not solid.
Everything on Jupiter weighs more than twice as much as on Earth. This means that Jupiter has a gravitational pull that is more than twice that of the gravitational pull on Earth.
No planet could survive at 93 miles away - much too close. Its Earth that is about 93 million miles from the sun on average.
Eris is not a planet; it is a dwarf planet. It is much smaller than Earth.