1.Saturn, if you weigh 100lbs on Earth you would weigh 106.4lbs on Saturn.
2.No it's Venus, it's our closest planet!
3.
I'm editing this because the answer is unclear. SATURN has the closest gravitational pull to that of ours. Venus is the closest planet to us but that is irrelevant. So your answer is Saturn.
Gravity is based on mass so most likely venus being that she is earths twin planet. mars would be very close to earths gravitional strength being that it is very similar. but i would go with venus.
Saturn with 1.065 g has a "surface" gravitational pull closest to Earth's (1g).
Saturn is much larger and more massive, but it has a very low density which brings its effective gravity lower at the outer cloud layers. Overall, it has a higher gravitational influence due to it's large mass, and one could not actually stand anywhere on Saturn or in its atmosphere.
In terms of surface gravity both Venus and Neptune have about 1g. In terms of gravitational field, Venus is most similar to earth. Venus is about 97% the size of earth and is 81% the mass of earth and thus their gravitational fields are similar.
Saturn pull is closest to that of Earth.
Saturn.
Venus.
The mutual gravitational forces between the Moon and the Earth are strongest when the distance between the two bodies is smallest. Just like the mutual gravitational forces between any other two bodies.
The gravitational pull of the Moon causes the tides to rise on the parts of the Earth closest to it.
The gravitational pull from the planet can determine it.
An object have greater gravitational pull closer from earth. As we get farther from earth, the gravitational pull becomes weaker. That is why objects sufficiently away from the earth do not fall on it.
Gravitational Pull.
Planet Earth.
The mutual gravitational forces between the Moon and the Earth are strongest when the distance between the two bodies is smallest. Just like the mutual gravitational forces between any other two bodies.
the suns gravitational pull is strongest because the earth is at its closest point to the sun.
Yes. It's about 38% of the strength of Earth's gravity.
Because of the gravitational pull between the Earth and the Moon
the earth is a planet with a gravitational pull unlike any other planet this is what people dont understand
it uses gravity. The sun has a gravitational pull, so it keeps the closest planet close to it. the farther away a planet is, the weaker the gravitational pull. Without it the planets would "drift" off from the sun. Plus all the moons wouldn't orbit us anymore. -----CMH
Everything on Jupiter weighs more than twice as much as on Earth. This means that Jupiter has a gravitational pull that is more than twice that of the gravitational pull on Earth.
Neptune is bigger than Earth which means, Neptune has got more gravitational pull than Earth.
The gravitational pull of the Moon causes the tides to rise on the parts of the Earth closest to it.
well depends what planet you are on the basic formulae is as follows weight = mass X gravitational field (gravitational pull) on each planet so depending on what planet you wish to know ill put int the answer . Mercury gravitational pull is 3.7 so its 3.7kg Venus gravitational pull is 8.8 so its 8.8kg Earth gravitational pull is 9.8 so its 9.8kg Mars gravitational pull is 3.7 so its 3.7kg Jupiter gravitational pull is 23.2 so its 23.2kg Saturn gravitational pull is 9.0 so its 9kg Uranus gravitational pull is 8.7 so its 8.7kg Neptune gravitational pull is 11.1 so its 11.1kg Pluto gravitational pull is 0.6 600g
Mars' gravitational pull is 3.7m/s^2(3.7 meters per second squared) as opposed to Earth's gravitational pull which is 9.81m/s^2(9.81 meters per second squared). The closest you can get to mars is in 2050 with 56 millon killometers