The force of gravity on the earth is 9.8 m/s^2
The acceleration due to gravity at the Earths surface is 9.81 m/s^2
The surface gravity on the moon is approximately one sixth the surface gravity of Earth.
An object on the moon's surface weighs 0.165 as much as it does on the Earth's surface.
Everything with mass has gravity. The foice of gravity on the Moon's surface is about 1/6 of what it is on the Earth's surface.
The Moon's gravity is 6 times weaker than that on the Earth's surface.
The surface gravity on Mars is about 37% or 3/8 that on Earth.
The surface gravity on the moon is approximately one sixth the surface gravity of Earth.
The Sun's gravity, at its surface, is about 28 times Earth's surface gravity.
At the surface, it is 2.64 times its value at the Earth's surface.
An object on the moon's surface weighs 0.165 as much as it does on the Earth's surface.
Sedna's surface gravity is estimated to be 0.27 m/sec2; Earth's surface gravity is about 9.8 m/sec2.
Mars's gravity is 38% of Earth's.
Martian gravity is only 38% of the Earth's gravity.
The gravity at the surface of Mercury is less than the gravity at the surface of the Earth because Mercury has less mass than Earth does.
This question is probably about the strength of the "surface gravity" of the planets. "Jupiter" is the obvious answer. It has a surface gravity about 2.5 times Earth's. Neptune also has a higher surface gravity than Earth. (Sometimes Saturn is given as another example, but it depends on the exact definition of "surface gravity".)
Io's surface gravity is about 0.18 g, where Earth's gravity is 1.0 g.
Everything with mass has gravity. The foice of gravity on the Moon's surface is about 1/6 of what it is on the Earth's surface.
At the surface, it's about the same as the Earth's . You get a bit of variation in the value given, but, at the equator, it's about 1.065 times the Earth's. It is about 0.92 times the Earth's gravity, if you take into account the effect of the planet's rotation.