No. The gravity of Jupiter more than twice as strong as that on Earth.
An earthquake
The moons gravity holds them down!! The moons gravity maybe lower than the Earth's gravity but on the moon it is strong enough to win the tug of war with Earth's gravitational pull.
If you take out the heat factor, then yes. Gravity is so strong at the center of the Earth that your entire body would be crushed under the pressure.
The Earth can't explode. Even if we blew up all the atomic weapons ever created, it wouldn't even put a dent in the earth. If you ignore the impossibility of it actually happening, and assume the earth exploded anyway, this is what would happen: The Moon and the dust left over from the Earth's explosion would continue on their orbit around the sun. If the explosion wasn't too strong, gravity would pull the dust back together to form a new planet. However if the explosion was strong enough, the fragments of the earth would be scattered to form a new asteroid belt, right where the Earth's orbit was.
really strong
Lunar gravity is one-sixth as strong as Earth's gravity.
they hit the earth with strong powers
earth quake
very strong that it reflects the sun rays to the pole and we see them as aurora which are handful to the ecosystem on earth
I don't know but Earth eagle is sure strong
yes acids can cause palution in the earth but it will need to be a very strong acid or a very strong alkali
Fire is weak against water ,but strong against earth/ground.Water is weak against air,but strong against fire.Air is weak to earth/ground,but strong to water. Earth/ground is weak to fire ,but strong to air. Neutral has no strengths nor weaknesses.
Gravity on the Moon is 0.165 that of Earth.
The Earth's mass, and how far you are from the center of the Earth.
the earth's gravitational pull is just strong enought to keep it in orbit, but not strong enought, at that distance, to pull it back to earth
Earths gravity isn't strong enough to pull it into the Earth, however it is strong enough to keep it from drifting away.