Dan's mass is the same as it is on Earth. His weight, however, is doubled.
On Mars, there is low gravity, so there you could jump twice as high as you can on Earth. The acceleration due to gravity on mars is 3.71 m/s2, which is 0.379 times that of Earth. (The gravity on Earth is 2.64 times greater than the gravity on Mars.)
That would depend on the planet's radius. The strength of gravity depends on both the mass of the object in question and the distance from its center of mass. If the planet in question had the same radius as Earth, then the person would weigh 200 lbs as gravity would be twice as strong. If the planet had the same density as Earth it would have 1.26 times Earth's radius and gravity would be 1.26 times as strong and the person would weigh 126 lbs. If the planet had about 1.41 times Earth's radius then that person's would weight 100 lbs.
False. Gravity on the moon is 1/6 that of Earth.
Mars has an orbital period of very approximately twice that of the earth
Jupiter and Neptune are the only planets in our Solar System that have more gravity than the Earth. Jupiter's gravity is about 236% that of the Earth, and Neptune's gravity is about 112% that of the Earth. Edit: Because of uncertainties and different definitions you can get data that says Saturn and/or Uranus also have slightly stronger gravity than Earth's.
In our solar system, the planets Uranus and Neptune have about twice the gravity of Earth.
Despite the fact that Uranus has a mass 14.5 times Earth's mass, its surface gravity isless thanEarth's.Jupiter and Neptune both have more "surface gravity" than Earth.
Dan's mass is the same as it is on Earth. His weight, however, is doubled.
Earth has the greater gravitational pull. Mars pulls with only about 38% of Earth's gravity.
On Mars, there is low gravity, so there you could jump twice as high as you can on Earth. The acceleration due to gravity on mars is 3.71 m/s2, which is 0.379 times that of Earth. (The gravity on Earth is 2.64 times greater than the gravity on Mars.)
Well you would need to know the force of Gravity on the surface of Planet A to answer this. The equation to use would be 5 multiplied by the force of gravity on Planet A = the weight in kilograms. So if Gravity on planet A was twice that on Earth then it would weigh 10Kg and if it was 1/2 that on Earth it would weigh 2.5 kg.
No planet.
That would depend on the planet's radius. The strength of gravity depends on both the mass of the object in question and the distance from its center of mass. If the planet in question had the same radius as Earth, then the person would weigh 200 lbs as gravity would be twice as strong. If the planet had the same density as Earth it would have 1.26 times Earth's radius and gravity would be 1.26 times as strong and the person would weigh 126 lbs. If the planet had about 1.41 times Earth's radius then that person's would weight 100 lbs.
apart from mercury,venus & mars (Pluto is no longer a planet).all other planets in our solar system has much greater gravity than earth.also some of the gas giants,or planets like Saturn have some satilites that have property's,that may outweight that of the earth. example titan;
False. Gravity on the moon is 1/6 that of Earth.
The mass of the object would remain the same because mass is an intrinsic property of the object. However, the weight of the object would double on a planet with twice the gravity of Earth since weight is the force exerted on the object due to gravity, which is directly proportional to the acceleration due to gravity.
Mass is not affected by gravity, so it would have the same mass. Weight, on the other hand, is affected by gravity, and would double when on the planet as compared to when it is on Earth (w=mg, where w=weight, m=mass, g=gravitational acceleration also called strength of gravity)