Mars has a force of gravity equal to 3.7m/s2.
The force of gravity on Mars is equal to 3.7m/s2. Mars's force of gravity is therefore 37.8% that of Earth's.
38 lb
It's about 38% of the strength of Earth's surface gravity.
Surface gravity (Earth=1) Mars: 0.38
The acceleration of gravity on the surface of Mars, and therefore the weight of objects located there, is about 38% of the corresponding number on the surface of the Earth, and about 2.3 times the corresponding number on the surface of the Moon. You're free to describe those numbers using any slippery ambiguous adjectives you like.
The force of gravity on Mars is equal to 3.7m/s2. Mars's force of gravity is therefore 37.8% that of Earth's.
The acceleration of gravity at the surface of Mars is approximately 3.7 m/s2. Earth's acceleration is 9.8 m/s2 on average. The force that gravity would exert on an object is dependent on its mass.
100 pounds on earth surface = 37.8 pounds on mars surface Mass remains the same though.
The gravitational force exerted at the surface (and above the surface) of Mars is weaker than that here on Earth. The reason: Mars has less mass than earth.
38 lb
It's about 38% of the strength of Earth's surface gravity.
The force of gravity on Mars is equal to 3.7m/s2. Mars's force of gravity is therefore 37.8% that of Earth's.
I think it is Mars, but the question is incomplete. Mars does have a surface gravity that's 37.7 percent of the Earth's.
Surface gravity on mars is 0.376 compared to that of the earth.
Surface gravity (Earth=1) Mars: 0.38
Mars's gravity is 38% of Earth's.
The force of gravity on Mars is equal to 3.7m/s2. Mars's force of gravity is therefore 37.8% that of Earth's.