Pluto but if you dont count that as a planet then Mercury.
No. The gravity on Mercury is less than half that of Earth.
It could be mars.
If the planet is smaller, then it can't have the same size. If you assume that a smaller planet has the same density as Earth (and therefore less mass), its surface gravity will be smaller. If you assume that a smaller planet has the same mass as Earth (and therefore more density), its surface gravity will be greater. This is because we would be closer to the planet's center - or to the planet's matter in general.
Venus has a gravity of about 0.904g, which is 90.4% of Earth's gravity. This means that if you were on Venus, you would feel almost the same weight as on Earth, but less than the Moon.
Mars has less gravity.
The "surface gravity" is less on Uranus.
because it has less mass.
No. My planet (and presumably yours as well) is Earth.
moon's gravity is (1/6)th of the earth's gravity
The gravity on the moon is about 1/6th of the gravity on Earth. This means that objects weigh much less on the moon compared to Earth.
the sun
Pluto but if you dont count that as a planet then Mercury.
No. The gravity on Mercury is less than half that of Earth.
It could be mars.
Io is a moon of Jupiter, not a planet. Surface gravity is about 18% of the gravity on Earth.
the bigger the planet the more gravity it has, the smaller the planet the less gravity it has, so if you weigh, lets say, 5 stone here on earth, you go to Jupiter and you weigh alot more as theres more gravity pulling on you, go to mercury and you'll weigh less as theres less gravity pulling on you.