No. You experience Earth's gravity constantly.
No, because of the great volume the gravity on Neptun is barely stronger than on the Earth.
No. The gravity on Mercury is less than half that of Earth.
You can squish a person anywhere. If you are referring to gravity alone, then no, it would not squash a person.
Yes, the gravity on Venus is about 91% of the gravity on Earth. So, a human on Venus would not be significantly squashed by the gravity, but they would feel heavier than on Earth due to the increased gravitational force.
No. The 'surface' gravity of neptune is only 1.14g, due to the low density of the planet. Surface pressure may 'squash' a person there though, although they would be frozen from the near 0K temprature. (approx -218C)
No. While Uranus has a greater mass than Earth it also has a grater radius and gravity decreases with greater distance from an object's center. In the case of Uranus, it works out that surface gravity is about 89% of what it is on Earth, so you would actually be a little bit lighter.
The ratio gravity on Mars to gravity on Earth is 1 to 2.64, while the ratio gravity on Earth to gravity on mars is 1 to .621.So a person on earth weighing 100 pounds would weigh 62 pounds on mars, and a 200 pound person would weigh 124
Mercury does not have extreme gravity. Its gravity is only 38% of Earth's. If you are talking about Jupiter, then yes.
The surface gravity on Mars is about 37% or 3/8 that on Earth.
A person that weighs 200 pounds on Earth would weigh about 33 pounds on the moon. This is because the moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity.
No. The gravity of Pluto is only about 6.3% of the gravity on Earth, less than half of the gravity on the moon. This is because Pluto is about 500 times less massive than Earth.
The gravity on Mercury is 38% of the gravity on Earth. A 100 pound person would weigh only 38 pounds on Mercury.