everywhere in the universe
The gravity of Earth is 2.6 times that of Mars.Mars's gravity is 38% of Earth's gravity.
Jupiter's gravity is about 24.8 m/s^2, which is approximately 2.53 times the gravity on Earth. This means that Jupiter has about 253% of Earth's gravity.
The moon has one-sixth the gravity of earth.
Pluto's force of gravity is equal to 0.58m/s2, whereas the force of gravity on Earth is 9.81m/s2. Thus, the gravity on Pluto is about 6% that of the gravity on Earth.
Mercury has the highest surface gravity of the terrestrial planets. Its gravity is about 0.38 times that of Earth's gravity.
Same as everything else .. Gravity
Yes, and everywhere else, too - gravity operates everywhere.
Weight (on Earth) or Mass (everyplace else)
We don't fall off the Earth because of gravity. Gravity is the force that pulls objects towards the center of the Earth, keeping us and everything else on the surface.
Nothing happens to gravity. It remains the same as it is everywhere else on earth.
There is gravity everywhere in Creation. It causes a force between every two bits of mass in the universe.
We don't fall off the Earth because of gravity. Gravity is a force that pulls everything towards the center of the Earth, keeping us and everything else on the surface. The Earth's round shape allows gravity to act evenly in all directions, keeping us grounded.
A desk or anything else would still weigh the same, but the Moon's gravity is only one-sixth of the Earth's gravity.
The pulling force that keeps us on Earth is gravity. Gravity is the force that attracts objects with mass toward one another. This force is what keeps us and everything else on Earth grounded.
It will pull water down, just as it will pull anything else down, and just as on Earth.
No. The earth has its own gravity. The lunar gravity causes tides on earth, but does not control earth's gravity.
One way is that without gravity the earth and sun would fall apart because there is nothing else to hold them together.