If you mean mass, then the answer would be no. Within our solar system, Jupiter has the greatest mass at 1899x1024kg, while Earth is the fourth most massive at 5.97x1024kg.
Comparison of the size of Uranus and the Earth. Uranus is 51118 km or about four Earths wide. It is the third widest and fourth heaviest planet in the Solar System
In astronomy, heavy, heaviest etc. is never used as that is a terminology for weight. Weight is a function of an objects mass and the amount of gravity. This is why you would weight 120lb on Earth but only 20lb on the Moon. We therefore use the terminology "mass" as it does not have to take gravity into account. So the most massive planet is Jupiter have more mass than any of the other planets. [See related question]
Jupiter is twice the mass of all the other planets combined. It is more useful and more accurate to refer to the mass of planets, and not to their weight.
In our solar system, the planet with the most mass is Jupiter. So, if the planets could be arranged with their centers all at the same distance from, say, the center of the sun, then Jupiter would be the heaviest in that situation.
Mars is the heaviest planet. Mercury is the third heaviest. Mars has an iron core that's the same as Earths except that Mars has a greater consistent Iron layout. Mercury is made primarily of iron and has a very low gravity due to its lack of size. Mars Earth Mercury Pluto(no longer a planet by classification) Jupiter * Saturn * Neptune * Uranus * Venus * All of the * Planets are gas based planets and would float in a pool of water if you could figure out how to do such a thing.
Jupiter is the biggest and heaviest planet.
Comparison of the size of Uranus and the Earth. Uranus is 51118 km or about four Earths wide. It is the third widest and fourth heaviest planet in the Solar System
Jupiter, with a mass 318 times that of the Earth.
No. In our solar system it is the second most massive planet. Fifth place goes to Earth.
In our solar system, the largest planet, Jupiter, is indeed also the heaviest, weighing in at about 317 times the mass of Earth. However, a larger planet isn't necessarily a heavier one - for example, Uranus is larger but less massive than Neptune.
yes it is the heaviest planet
It is uranus because that is the seventh planet on earth that's right
Jupiter, It weighs 318 times more than Earth
Earth is not the heaviest planet known. In our solar system that distinction goes to Jupiter, which is over 300 times the mass of Earth. (There are also exoplanets much heavier than Jupiter.)
The blue whale is the heaviest animal ever to have lived on Earth, with adults reaching weights of up to 200 tons. These massive marine mammals are larger than any known dinosaur that once roamed the planet.
The tarantula is the largest, heaviest spider on the plant.
Yes