I am going to assume that you meant planet, and the answer is all of them. Everything in the Universe has gravity to some degree.
Pluto has a weaker gravity than Earth. In fact, Pluto has a weaker gravity than Earth's moon.
The gravity on Earth is stronger than the gravity on Mercury.
Neptune has slightly more gravity than Earth. It is believed that the gravity is 17% greater than Earth's.
Space has no gravity. Gravity needs a mass to exist, and it is relative to other neighbouring masses.
Venus has a slightly weaker gravity than Earth. The acceleration due to gravity on Venus is about 90% of the gravity on Earth. It means that objects would weigh slightly less on Venus compared to Earth.
Earth has gravity rather than other planets.
Yes. All mass exerts a gravitational pull and gravity exists everywhere. Many objects have much stronger gravity than Earth does.
The "surface gravity" is slightly less than on Earth.
Pluto has a weaker gravity than Earth. In fact, Pluto has a weaker gravity than Earth's moon.
Mars has approximately one third the surface gravity of the earth
There is gravity on the moon but not as much as on Earth. This is because the amount of gravity depends on the mass of the object creating the gravity and the moon is much smaller and has much lower mass than the Earth. If you are far enough away from the Earth (and moon) their will be a point where there is no noticeable gravity.
"The moon has more gravity than the earth." is a question (about the moon and gravity).
Mars has a weaker gravity than earth because it is a smaller planet and is smaller than
The gravity on Earth is stronger than the gravity on Mercury.
Earth has weaker gravity than the sun bu stronger gravity than the moon.
Neptune has slightly more gravity than Earth. It is believed that the gravity is 17% greater than Earth's.
Yes. All objects have some degree of gravity. So gravity exists everywhere in space.