On Uranus, you would choke, be squashed, and burn up.
Anybody who lives on Earth experiences gravity.
A physicist and a pathologist. There is no single term for someone that does both. A pathologist may specifically study the effects of gravity on vaccines
The scientist who wrote about gravity and the laws of motion was Sir Isaac Newton.
Yes, Saturn's atmosphere is mostly composed of hydrogen and helium gases, making it very thick and dense. The high pressure and extreme temperatures on Saturn would crush and vaporize a person long before they reached the planet's surface.
No. Earth has the gravity it has. There's no way of boosting it or concentrating it.
No. Surface gravity on Venus is slightly less than gravity on Earth. A person would, however, be crushed by the atmospheric pressure and cooked by the extreme heat.
No. The 'surface' gravity of neptune is only 1.14g, due to the low density of the planet. Surface pressure may 'squash' a person there though, although they would be frozen from the near 0K temprature. (approx -218C)
On Uranus, you would choke, be squashed, and burn up.
No. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of what it is on Earth, so you would actually be much lighter there. The only planet with gravity strong enough that it would render people unable to stand is Jupiter/
The gravity on Mercury is 38% of the gravity on Earth. A 100 pound person would weigh only 38 pounds on Mercury.
On Mercury, a person who weighs 110 pounds on Earth would weigh approximately 41 pounds due to Mercury's lower gravity. Mercury has only about 38% of the gravity compared to Earth.
A 170 pound person would weigh approximately 64 pounds on Mercury due to its lower gravitational pull compared to Earth. Mercury's gravity is about 38% of Earth's gravity, so a person would weigh less on Mercury.
A 90-pound person would weigh approximately 38.58 pounds on Mercury due to its gravity being only 38% of Earth's gravity.
The acceleration of gravity at the surface of Mercury is 3.697 meters/sec2 .The corresponding value on earth is 9.807 m/s2 .The acceleration and force of gravity on Mercury are 37.7% of their values on earth.A person who weighs 100 pounds on earth would weigh 37.7 pounds on Mercury.
It would go something like this. e = Earth's gravity m = Mercury's gravity e*0.38=m Just put whatever number in Earth's gravity and do the math.
The gravity of Mercury is approximately 38% that of Earths gravity at the surface.Here are some comparisons:A 150 lbs person would weight 57 lbs on Mercury.You would be able to jump about 2.63 times as high on Mercury making a person capable of jumping over their head doing a standard stationary vertical jump.The moon's gravity is 16% of the Earths gravity as opposed to Mercury's 38%