Yes, almost! The gravity on Venus is about 90.5% of the gravity on the earth. A person weighing 100 lbs on the earth would only weigh 90.5 lbs on Venus. However, it might be worth noting, before you plan your next vacation, that the air on Venus is deadly poisonous (sulfuric acid and carbon dioxide), and the temperature is 450oC, well above the boiling point of water! Venus is smaller than the earth, and less dense, so the gravity is less than that on the earth. As you know, gravity accelerates the speed and distance of a falling object. The pull of gravity is measured in meters per second, squared (m/s2). This means that things fall faster and faster every second after falling from a stationary position. Gravity, at the equator:
Venus: 8.87 m/s2,
Earth: 9.780327 m/s2.Conclusion:
Gravity on Venus is less than on the Earth.
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9.7% less than you weigh on Earth, 138% more than you weigh on Mars.
If you weighed 100 lb on Earth you would weigh 90.7 lbs on Venus1lb = 0.9075lb = 4.510lb = 925lb = 22.650lb = 45.3100lb = 90.7150lb = 136200lb = 181.4500lb = 453.5Or multiply x 0.907For other worlds [See related]
Gravity is not particularly strong on Venus it's about the same as it is on Earth, 8.87 m/s2, vs. 9.81 m/s2. That's not surprising since the two planets have about the same size, and Venus is a bit less dense. Atmospheric pressure is very high on Venus, but that's another story.
Newton's Law: g = Gm / r2 where g is the gravity and G is the gravitational constant for all things (6.67E-11) and m is the mass of the planet and r is the radius of the planet... plug in the numbers and you will get your answer. unit: m /s Newton's Law: g = Gm / r2 where g is the gravity and G is the gravitational constant for all things (6.67E-11) and m is the mass of the planet and r is the radius of the planet... plug in the numbers and you will get your answer. unit: m /s The gravity of Venus is about 90% of that on Earth. this is confuzzing to me so go to nasa.com for a shorter more simple answer
Neptune has slightly more gravity than Earth. It is believed that the gravity is 17% greater than Earth's.
Venus is slightly smaller and less dense than the Earth is, so it has lower surface gravity.
9.7% less than you weigh on Earth, 138% more than you weigh on Mars.
Earth (by definition has a gravity exerting a pull of 1g. Venus is almost the same as Earth but the pull of gravity there is 0.904g. So Earth has more gravity.
It doesn't Earth has more gravity.
I think the planet earth has more gravity
you would weigh the least on mars. (take in account Pluto is not a planet any more)
Venus has a surface gravity slightly less than Earth's. It also has clouds, but not like Earth clouds -- Venus clouds are sulfuric acid, suspended in the dense, superheated carbon dioxide atmosphere. See the related link for more information.
On earth, the gravity is greater in earth
An example of a planet with a gravity 2.54 times that of Earth is Venus. Venus has a surface gravity of 0.91 g, where 1 g is the gravitational force on Earth. This higher gravity on Venus means objects would weigh 2.54 times more than on Earth.
If you weighed 100 lb on Earth you would weigh 90.7 lbs on Venus1lb = 0.9075lb = 4.510lb = 925lb = 22.650lb = 45.3100lb = 90.7150lb = 136200lb = 181.4500lb = 453.5Or multiply x 0.907For other worlds [See related]
Jupiters gravity is much more than on the earth!
There is more gravity on Saturn