Yes, if Earth gained mass, its gravity would increase, which would make your weight greater because you would experience a stronger gravitational force pulling you towards the center of the Earth.
No, it would be considerably less because the force of gravity doesn't pull as hard on 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.
Earth isn't a star and doesn't (can't) have a parallax, becuse we use Earth's orbit as a baseline to measure parallax.
A person who weighs 150 pounds on Earth would weigh approximately 25 pounds on the moon, as the moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity.
It would be greater.
It would be greater.
It would be greater.
Yes, if Earth gained mass, its gravity would increase, which would make your weight greater because you would experience a stronger gravitational force pulling you towards the center of the Earth.
If you're the same distance from the center of the planet but its mass is greater than earth's mass, then the mutual gravitational force between you and that planet is greater than on earth, and you'll "weigh" more than you do here.
The mass of the sun is many times that of the earth, the result is that the acceleration of gravity is also much greater. Since the acceleration of gravity on the sun is higher, and the weight of an object is based on its mass and acceleration of gravity, the object would weigh considerably more
No, it would be considerably less because the force of gravity doesn't pull as hard on it.
You'r weight would be greater because the more mass the greater the gravitational pull which is what causes weight in the first place
Weight on Venus = 0.904*weight on earth.
Since the Earth is so much larger, it has a greater gravitational pull. The moon orbits the Earth because of this pull.
earth, because earth has a greater gravitational pull
12 kg or 1/6th.