0.92 (times Earth's surface gravity).
Edit :
OK this one is a bit tricky. It is usually given for Saturn's equator. It does
depend on latitude. Also the rotation speed affects the "apparent gravity" because of "centrifugal force", but this doesn't affect the underlying force of course. So you will see some variation in the figures quoted, depending on definition, etc.
I looked at a NASA pages for this and they give two different values. One is the answer above, given by a previous contributor. The other value is:
1.065 x Earth's.
Most sources seem to agree things would weigh a bit more on Saturn, but it's a bit confused.
The surface gravity of Uranus is similar in strength to Earth's. It depends on exactly how you measure it and how you define it. Some sources put it at about 90% of Earth's, others say it's up to 115% of Earth's.
Local gravity can't be described in units of "kg".The acceleration of gravity at the surface of Mercury is3.697 meters (12.13 feet) per second2 .
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.
Neptune's gravity is 1.14 times the earths gravity. So if you weigh 100 pounds you would weigh 114 on Neptune.
At the surface, it's about the same as the Earth's . You get a bit of variation in the value given, but, at the equator, it's about 1.065 times the Earth's. It is about 0.92 times the Earth's gravity, if you take into account the effect of the planet's rotation.
Saturn's surface gravity is approx 6.5% greater than the earth's.
It has no land.
Weaker. The gravity on the surface of Venus is about 8.87 meters per square second; for comparison, on Earth, the gravity is about 9.82 meters per square second.
About 0.5-2 bar.
Neither. Saturn is a gas giant. It does not have a solid surface.
Saturns Moon Does But Earth Doesn't Well At Least I Think That's The Answer :)
They are not regenerated. The rings are generated by the gravity of the planet and the inertia of the object.
Saturn is a gas planet, so it has no surface
From -191 to -131 Celsius
true
There is no landscape, Saturn is a gas planet with no solid surface.
Yes.