Within our own solar system, Jupiter has the greatest mass and therefore the greatest gravity. However, we've discovered hundred of exo-planets which orbit other stars than the Sun, which are dozens of times more massive than Jupiter.
The planet with the third-biggest gravitational pull is Uranus.
Jupiter (out of all the planets within our solar system.)
Jupiter has the greatest gravitational pull, if you weigh 100lbs on Earth, you would weigh 253lbs on Jupiter.
Greatest GravityIn our solar system, the planet with the greatest gravity is Jupiter.and lowest gravity planet is Mercury. (Pluto's gravity is lower than that of Mercury, but Pluto is no longer considered a planet.)Jupiter.
Gravity
The gravity on Mars or any other planet pulls you toward the planet's center.
Saturn has the second greatest mass, so it also has the second greatest gravity.
gravity
Jupiter has the strongest gravity. The bigger the planet, the stronger the gravity. The moon is kind of small, so it's gravity is weaker.
No. The gravitational pull at the surface of a planet depends on that planet's mass and radius. Jupiter has the strongest gravity of any planet in the solar system: 2.53 times the surface gravity on Earth. Mercury has the weakest surface gravity at just 37% the gravity on Earth.
Gravity is an attractive force that occurs between all objects with mass. The gravity of any planet will pull objects in.
No. The surface gravity of a planet is a product of its size and mass. It has nothing to do with distance from the sun. However, a planet farther away from the sun will experience a weaker pull from the sun's gravity.