No, because each plant has it's own gravitational pull. U might weigh more on 1 plant then u do on an other.
No on the moon you weigh approximately 4 times less on the moon than you do on Earth. Of all the planets, you weigh the heaviest on Jupiter.
No, because each plant has it's own gravitational pull. U might weigh more on 1 plant then u do on an other.
It depends where you are. If you're nowhere near any planets, you don't weigh anything at all. Your mass stays the same though.
The planets of our solar system are most definitely NOT all the same size.
there are no inner gas planets only outer gas planets but they are the same because they all have rings, they are all made of gas.
all planets.
Do all planets and satellites lie on the same gravitational layer?
By a very slim margin you would weigh the least on Mercury, where gravity is 37% the strength of it is on Earth. This is only a tiny bit less than the gravity of Mars, which is 37.11% of Earth's gravity.
In all probability, all the planets are about the same age. They formed around the same time as all of the other planets give or take a few million years.
Do all rocks weigh the same if they have a different mass but the same weight? Let's look at the question without one bit of it..... "Do all rocks weigh the same if they have ......... .... ... the same weight?" If things are the same weight, then they weigh the same.
because there outer planets
No. All of the outer planets, (unincluding the dwarf planet Pluto) are all made of gas, and far larger than the inner planets.