The more gravity something has, the more gravity it has. A planet, like Jupiter, can have 30-something moons because of it's large mass. And the solar system exists only because the sun has so much mass it generates gravity for all the planets.
Planets have different fields of gravity because their mass and size vary. The larger and more massive a planet is, the stronger its gravitational pull will be. The strength of gravity on a planet is determined by its mass and radius.
There is gravity on all planets. The strength of that gravity varies depending on the size and mass of each planet.
Yes, dwarf planets have gravity just like any other astronomical body. Gravity is a fundamental force that exists due to the mass of an object, so all objects with mass, including dwarf planets, have their own gravitational pull.
No. Gravity from any object varies depending on its size and mass.
Mercury has the smallest mass of the 8 planets at 5.5% of the mass of the Earth. It therefore has the least gravity of all the planets.
All mass produces a gravity field. All planets have mass. Therefore all planets have gravity.
Planets have different fields of gravity because their mass and size vary. The larger and more massive a planet is, the stronger its gravitational pull will be. The strength of gravity on a planet is determined by its mass and radius.
All planets have gravity to some degree due to their mass. Gravity is what keeps objects, including planets, in orbit around the sun.
Planets have gravity because they have mass.
There is gravity on all planets. The strength of that gravity varies depending on the size and mass of each planet.
Yes, all planets have gravity. Gravity is a force that attracts objects with mass towards each other, so every celestial body with mass, including planets, has its own gravitational pull.
There is gravity everywhere in the universe. It attracts every speck of mass to every other speck of mass.
They all have mass, and masses are attracted to each other.
Yes! Anything that has mass has gravity. The more mass something has (the bigger it is), then the more gravity it will have. So everything around us (including all the planets) have gravity! Even people have gravity...it's just that people are so small that there's not enough gravity to matter. Even the biggest building on the Earth is too small to have enough gravity for you to notice it. But since planets are /really/ big, they have enough gravity to hold things down.
No. Planets have gravity as a result of their own mass.
Yes, dwarf planets have gravity just like any other astronomical body. Gravity is a fundamental force that exists due to the mass of an object, so all objects with mass, including dwarf planets, have their own gravitational pull.
Gravity exists on all planets, though the force differs depending on the mass of the planet.