The planet Venus. See more details here: http://www.answers.com/topic/Venus
No. The gravity of Jupiter more than twice as strong as that on Earth.
Jupiter is the 5th planet out from the Sun. The planet Mars (in 4th place) is right in between our planet Earth and Jupiter. Is 1000 times bigger than earth!
Saturn has rings and Earth doesn't.Earth has only one moon, while Saturn has 62.Saturn is 95 times more massive than Earth.It has a Great Red Spot (an oval hurricane).Saturn has rings and earth does not.
apart from mercury,venus & mars (Pluto is no longer a planet).all other planets in our solar system has much greater gravity than earth.also some of the gas giants,or planets like Saturn have some satilites that have property's,that may outweight that of the earth. example titan;
The Earth has only about 1.05 times the surface area of Venus, one reason Venus is our twin planet. Venus-12,104 km Earth-12,756 km
Uranus.
Jupiter has approximately that surface gravity.
An example of a planet with a gravity 2.54 times that of Earth is Venus. Venus has a surface gravity of 0.91 g, where 1 g is the gravitational force on Earth. This higher gravity on Venus means objects would weigh 2.54 times more than on Earth.
The force of gravity on Jupiter is 24.8 ms-2, a little over 2.5 times that on earth.
You already stated in the question that it has 3.4 times the gravity of Earth.
At the surface, it is 2.64 times its value at the Earth's surface.
Despite the fact that Uranus has a mass 14.5 times Earth's mass, its surface gravity isless thanEarth's.Jupiter and Neptune both have more "surface gravity" than Earth.
Mercury has the highest surface gravity of the terrestrial planets. Its gravity is about 0.38 times that of Earth's gravity.
The force of gravity on Jupiter is much stronger than on Earth due to Jupiter's larger mass. Jupiter's gravity is about 2.5 times that of Earth.
No. The gravitational pull at the surface of a planet depends on that planet's mass and radius. Jupiter has the strongest gravity of any planet in the solar system: 2.53 times the surface gravity on Earth. Mercury has the weakest surface gravity at just 37% the gravity on Earth.
Neptune's magnetic field is about 27 times stronger than Earth's. It is tilted at an angle of about 47 degrees from the planet's rotational axis, which is believed to be a result of its off-center magnetic field.
No. Let's take Earth as a good example to start with. Let's say you look at the force of gravity of Pluto if it were twice as far from the Sun as Earth is. The force of gravity would be 2x2 = 4 times weaker. Move Pluto away from Sun twice that distance, and the force of gravity would be another 4 times weaker. Move Pluto away from the Sun another 2 times its previous distance, and the force of gravity between it and the Sun would be yet another 4 times weaker. And so on, until you reach a point in space where Pluto is really, actually positioned.