The gravity on Mars or any other planet pulls you toward the planet's center.
Mars has less gravity.
mass,volume, gravity,of mars
Yes, but gravity is low.
The presence or absence of spacecraft near Mars will have no effect whatsoever on the planet's gravitational field.
The distance between a planet and an object affects the gravitational force between them. That means the size of a planet affects the value of the "surface gravity" for that planet. The greater thedistance from the surface to the center of the planet, the smaller the gravity at the surface (for the same planet mass). An example is the fact that Mars and Mercury have almost exactly the same surface gravity. Mars has more mass than Mercury, but this is balancedby the fact that Mercury hasthe smaller radius.
The red planet is Mars, 4th planet from the sun and 7th largest. The name of the month of March derives from the name Mars
Mars has a mass of 0.642x1024kg and a gravitational force of 3.7m/s2.
The importantidea here is a planet's "surface gravity". That's the measure of the planet's gravitational "pull"at its surface. The larger this number, the heavier the weight ofan object on the surface of the planet. For example, the "surface gravity" on Mars is only 38% of the Earth's. So, if you could be on the surface of Mars, your weight would be 38% of your weight on Earth.
Yes it does but not as much as earth does. Every object that has mass also has gravity.
inner planet
Mars is an inner planet.
The gravity of a planet does not hold it in place, nor does any planet stay still. The planets are in constant motion as they orbit the sun.