If you could jump 2 feet on Earth, you could jump 30 feet on Pluto.
No, a person could not jump further on Mars than on Saturn. Mars has lower gravity than Earth but Saturn has much stronger gravity than both Mars and Earth, making jumping farther on Saturn impossible due to the higher gravitational pull.
Mars. Because if you weigh 105 pounds here on earth then you would weigh 39.5 pounds on Mars while on Venus you would weigh 95.2. The whole jump height is all about the amount of force in Newtons you put into it and how much you weigh. So net time you think "Could you jump higher on Venus or on Mars?" Just think about the weight you have and the amount of force you put into it.
About twice the distance you could on earth. You could jump much further if you didnt have to wear a spacesuit. Maybe we can have a Lunar Olympics someday if we make an atmosphere for the moon like we have here on earth.
With a stronger gravitational pull on Jupiter than on Earth, the man would be able to jump higher on Jupiter. On Jupiter, his jump would be approximately 18 feet high, which is equal to 216 inches.
The moon's gravity is about one-sixth that of Earth's, so you could potentially jump much higher on the moon. The average person can jump about 2-3 feet off the ground, but on the moon, you could potentially jump as high as 4-6 feet due to the lower gravity.
1 and a half of Earth jump height, approximately
That depends on how high you can jump on Earth.The surface gravity on Mars is about 3/8ths as high as that of Earth, meaning, all else being equal, if you multiply how high you are able to jump on Earth by 8/3 then that will tell you how high you would be able to jump on Mars.
Mars has weaker gravity than Jupiter does.
He can jump about as high as the moon no joke
On Mars, there is low gravity, so there you could jump twice as high as you can on Earth. The acceleration due to gravity on mars is 3.71 m/s2, which is 0.379 times that of Earth. (The gravity on Earth is 2.64 times greater than the gravity on Mars.)
You could jump farther on Mars than Jupiter because Mars has lower gravity than Jupiter. Gravity is the force that pulls objects towards a planet's center, so lower gravity on Mars means you can jump higher and farther there compared to the higher gravity on Jupiter.
You can certainly jump lower anywhere. That's as easy as a contest to see who can talk softer. But you can also jump higher on Mars, because the acceleration of gravity on its surface is only about 38% of what it is on Earth's surface.
No, a person could not jump further on Mars than on Saturn. Mars has lower gravity than Earth but Saturn has much stronger gravity than both Mars and Earth, making jumping farther on Saturn impossible due to the higher gravitational pull.
Mars. Because if you weigh 105 pounds here on earth then you would weigh 39.5 pounds on Mars while on Venus you would weigh 95.2. The whole jump height is all about the amount of force in Newtons you put into it and how much you weigh. So net time you think "Could you jump higher on Venus or on Mars?" Just think about the weight you have and the amount of force you put into it.
no
The komodo dragon could jump as high as a chair and 5.2 feet high
Well, if humans could jump as high as a flea, they could jump over the empire state building. So given that frogs are about 1/10th the size of a human, if a frog could jump as high as a flea, they could probably jump 1/10th of the empire state building, or about 125 feet high.