It hasn't. The acceleration of gravity on or near the surface of Venus
is about 91% of what it is on or near the surface of the Earth.
(That's less than what it is here.)
Earth (by definition has a gravity exerting a pull of 1g. Venus is almost the same as Earth but the pull of gravity there is 0.904g. So Earth has more gravity.
Venus' gravity is 0.88 that of Earth.
Venus and Earth are similar in size, and have similar surface gravity. However, compared to Earth, Venus has slightly less gravity (8.87 m/s2 compared to Earth's 9.81 m/s2 ). The surface pressure of these two planets is substantially different, though: it is 92 times greater on Venus than it is on Earth!
The gravity on the surface of Venus is 0.904 of that on the surface of Earth. You may find the related link below useful.
Yes. Venus has less mass and therefore has less gravity.
yes it is further away from the gravity pull so yes
Yes it does. All objects have gravity but the amount of gravity depends on the mass of the object.
Gravity is not particularly strong on Venus it's about the same as it is on Earth, 8.87 m/s2, vs. 9.81 m/s2. That's not surprising since the two planets have about the same size, and Venus is a bit less dense. Atmospheric pressure is very high on Venus, but that's another story.
The gravity on Venus would be about 90.4% of Earth's (0.904 g). Although the planet has a smaller mass, it also has a slightly smaller diameter.
Earth is more massive than Mars and therefore has greater gravity.
The gravity on Earth is stronger than the gravity on Mercury.
The pull of gravity on Earth is directly related to the mass of the Earth and the distance of an object from the Earth's center. The force of gravity decreases with increasing distance from the Earth's center but increases with greater mass.