I think it can because there is a lot of atmospheric pressure so it can be crushed at one point.
It would be crushed very quickly. The pressure on Venus is almost 100 times the pressure on earth. The gravity on Venus is less than the gravity on earth, however.
On Mercury, a can would not be crushed due to gravity because the planet's gravity is too weak. However, the can could be crushed due to the high atmospheric pressure on Mercury, which is about 100 times greater than Earth's atmospheric pressure.
No. The gravity on Mars is only about 38% of that on Earth, so you would be much lighter there. Of the planets in this solar system, only Jupiter's gravity would stand any real chance of doing harm.
Neptune's "surface gravity" is a bit more than Earth's, but Neptune's gravity would not crush you. If you went deep inside Neptune the pressure would probably crush you. That's not gravity crushing you directly, but the pressure. This pressure is caused by the combination of gravity and the planet's resistance to being compressed by gravity. The pressure increases rapidly with depth.
Specific gravity affects head pressure in a pump system by changing the weight of the fluid being pumped. A higher specific gravity means the fluid is denser and heavier, resulting in higher head pressure needed to overcome the increased resistance of the fluid. Conversely, a lower specific gravity would require less head pressure.
If Earth's gravity was a billion times stronger than a black hole's, everything on Earth would be crushed instantly under the immense gravitational force. The planet itself would collapse into a black hole due to the overwhelming gravity. Life as we know it would cease to exist.
On Mercury, a can would not be crushed due to gravity because the planet's gravity is too weak. However, the can could be crushed due to the high atmospheric pressure on Mercury, which is about 100 times greater than Earth's atmospheric pressure.
They would suffocate. And be crushed by gravity and (maybe) atmospheric pressure.
No. Surface gravity on Venus is slightly less than gravity on Earth. A person would, however, be crushed by the atmospheric pressure and cooked by the extreme heat.
If you take out the heat factor, then yes. Gravity is so strong at the center of the Earth that your entire body would be crushed under the pressure.
It, and everything inside it, would be crushed (this is, of course, if the centre of the Earth was empty, because if it wasn't, then you would be burnt to a crisp due to the immense heat fo the centre of the Earth). Your head would be crushed because gravity pulls you to the centre of the Earth, and if this is happening all over the Earth, then loads of gravity is going into one spot in the centre of the Earth. This would all push at you on all sides and subsequently crush you.
They would be dead because of extreme cold and lack of oxygen and crushed from the gravity.
No. Despite being more massive than Earth, the low density resulting large diameter of Uranus result in gravity at the nominal "surface" being slightly weaker than the gravity on Earth. That being said, the "surface" does not actually exist; it is merely the level at which atmospheric pressure is roughly equal to sea level pressure on Earth. A person placed there would fall through the gaseous outer layers of the planet and would be crushed by the extreme atmospheric pressure deep within.
Jupiter's immense pressure is caused by the massive gravitational force pulling inward on its atmosphere. If a human were to be exposed to Jupiter's atmosphere, the extreme pressure would crush the body, causing it to be compressed and potentially causing fatal injuries due to the enormous force exerted.
They would quickly be crushed by the atmospheric pressure.
A human would be crushed by the intense atmospheric pressure, which is 90 times that of the Earth's atmospheric pressure.
no air, high atmospheric pressure, would be crushed
No. The gravity on Mars is only about 38% of that on Earth, so you would be much lighter there. Of the planets in this solar system, only Jupiter's gravity would stand any real chance of doing harm.