He will be so pleased to find that he has lost 62% of his weight
that he may want to stay there.
In our solar system, at least, the planet with the greatest mass does happen to be the one with the most known moons. But I think the cause and effect work the other way. It's not the moons that give the planet strong gravity. It's the strong gravity of the planet that captures a bunch of moons.
No. While the gravity of Jupiter is much stronger than Earth's it is nowhere near as strong as that of a black hole.
The space shuttle would get ripped apart and would be destroyed because of the strong gravity difference (the nose would get pulled on by gravity harder than on the tail).
Gravity.
Gravity on the Moon is 0.165 that of Earth.
Roughly 1/3 that of Earth's. 38 percent :)
Gravity would crush you. With gravity so strong light cannot escape I am sure you wont.
Lunar gravity is one-sixth as strong as Earth's gravity.
In our solar system, at least, the planet with the greatest mass does happen to be the one with the most known moons. But I think the cause and effect work the other way. It's not the moons that give the planet strong gravity. It's the strong gravity of the planet that captures a bunch of moons.
really strong
strong
The gravity is related to the mass of the object.
no it is not
It does have gravity, but it's gravity isn't as strong as our home plant, Earth.
There is no reason why it should explode. The gravity that holds it together is way too strong.
No. While the gravity of Jupiter is much stronger than Earth's it is nowhere near as strong as that of a black hole.
The force of "strong force" increases with distance, unlike gravity and electromagnetism which do the opposite.