Not at all! Since Uranus is gaseous rather than solid, its force of gravity is actually less than Earth's.
If you weighed 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 86 pounds on the surface of Uranus, if you could find some place to stand on. You would freeze to death on Uranus, though, as the temperature is around -300 degrees F.
yes
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)
A person would freeze to death, and they would suffocate.
if we were to be on uranus the gravity would be 89% of what we get on earth.
Estimates of gravity on Uranus range from 86% to 91% of Earth's gravity. Therefore, using 89%, if you weighed 90 lbs on Earth, you would weigh about 80 lbs on Uranus.
yes
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)
A person would freeze to death, and they would suffocate.
if we were to be on uranus the gravity would be 89% of what we get on earth.
yes
On Uranus, you would choke, be squashed, and burn up.
Mars does not have extreme gravity! It is less than 40% of the earth's gravity.
No. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of what it is on Earth, so you would actually be much lighter there. The only planet with gravity strong enough that it would render people unable to stand is Jupiter/
if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 86 pounds on Uranus.
if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 86 pounds on Uranus.
No, the gravity at the surface of Mars is less than what we experience on Earth. So any people going there would find they were unusually light, not excessively heavy.
No. Despite being more massive than Earth, the low density resulting large diameter of Uranus result in gravity at the nominal "surface" being slightly weaker than the gravity on Earth. That being said, the "surface" does not actually exist; it is merely the level at which atmospheric pressure is roughly equal to sea level pressure on Earth. A person placed there would fall through the gaseous outer layers of the planet and would be crushed by the extreme atmospheric pressure deep within.