The equatorial surface gravity of Saturn is 1.065 g. Whereas that of earth is 0.99732 g. So yes it is.
Comment: Or is it? NASA have a data page showing Saturn's gravity as
about 0.92 times Earth's gravity. That's because they take into account the
effect of the planet's rotation. This is a question with two different correct
answers, depending on the definitions used. That's annoying.
(Incidentally, the value 0.99732 g for Earth must take into account Earth's
rotation, otherwise it would surely be 1.00000 g. The effect of rotation is far
less for Earth, of course.)
Food, water, air, shelter, and anti gravity. Saturns gravity is much stronger than Earths; it would crush you.
Less, about 1/6th of Earths.
The moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's.
Saturns mass is 5.6846 x 1026 kg, around 95 times the mass of the Earth. Saturns Volume is around 8.2713x 1014 cubic km, around 764 times that of Earths volume. Saturns gravitational strength at the equator is most similar to Earths at 1.065g.
The gravity of a black hole is stronger than Earth's gravity. Black holes have such a strong gravitational pull that not even light can escape from them.
no
Yes it does, because the Earth is smaller than Saturn it will have less gravity than Saturn and because Saturn is bigger it will have more gravity
Uranus's gravity is far stronger than earths.
true
Earths surface of gravity is 4.6m/s2 more than moons.
The Sun has a gravity of 27.94 g whereas the Earth has a gravity of 0.99732 g about 28 times more than the Earth.
Stronger gravity than what? The gravity of Venus is stronger than that of the moon or of Mars, but weaker than that of Earth.