The gravity of Ceres is 0.27 m/s² or 0.028 g
Oh, dude, of course Ceres has gravity! It's a dwarf planet in our solar system, not some floating balloon at a birthday party. It's got enough gravity to hold itself together and even has a little bit of an atmosphere. So yeah, Ceres is definitely bringing the gravity to the party.
The gravity on Ceres - which is a "dwarf planet" or "plutoid" in what is called the asteroid belt - is 3% of Earth's. If the weight of an average man on Earth is 175 pounds, then on Ceres he would weigh 2.25 pounds.
About 2.4 kg, the gravity on Ceres is 1/30th that of Earth
Yes, much bigger. Ceres is about the size of Texas.
The moon is much bigger then Ceres. Ceres is just under 1000 km in diameter. The moon is about 3,474 km in diamter so that mean the moon is bigge by more then 3.4 times.
Yes. Surface gravity on Ceres is about 3% that of Earth.
Earth has more gravity than Ceres does. Ceres gravity is 3% of that of Earth's.
Oh, dude, of course Ceres has gravity! It's a dwarf planet in our solar system, not some floating balloon at a birthday party. It's got enough gravity to hold itself together and even has a little bit of an atmosphere. So yeah, Ceres is definitely bringing the gravity to the party.
The acceleration of gravity on the surface of the dwarf planet Ceres is listed as 0.27 m/s2. That's 2.75% of its value on Earth. If you weigh 200 pounds on Earth, then you would weigh 51/2 pounds on Ceres, not counting all the stuff you'd need to wear just to stay alive there.
The gravity on Ceres - which is a "dwarf planet" or "plutoid" in what is called the asteroid belt - is 3% of Earth's. If the weight of an average man on Earth is 175 pounds, then on Ceres he would weigh 2.25 pounds.
Eris: 0.82 ms-2.Ceres: 0.27 ms-2.
About 2.4 kg, the gravity on Ceres is 1/30th that of Earth
Pretty much so. It isn't PERFECTLY spherical, but it has achieved "hydrostatic equilibrium", meaning that its internal gravity has crushed it into a ball.
Most likely not. It was probably an object that, due to perturbations by Jupiter's gravity, did not collect as much mass as the planets did.
I am not too sure but as soon as I find out, I will write it.
weaker
No. Ceres is much smaller than the moon.