Jupiter does not have a solid surface upon which to stand - just many turbulent and increasingly dense layers of gas and liquid - though it may have a very dense, solid core.
However, if you were to stand where the gassy layers give way to liquid (its approximate surface), gravity would be about 25m/s2. That's over two and a half times the gravity on the surface of Earth.
If you weighed 100lbs on Earth (where gravity is 9.8 m/s2), you would weigh about 254lbs on Jupiter, or be around 254% as heavy (or 154% heavier).
This is because, though Jupiter is 318 times the mass of the Earth, it is 11 times greater in diameter. Gravity increases with mass, but decreases with the distance from the centre of mass. The gravitational force is g=m/r2 (gravitational constant x mass of Jupiter x mass of the object, all divided by the distance between the centres of mass squared).
If you could compress the mass of Jupiter down to the size of Earth and attempt to land upon its surface, you would be crushed into oblivion - your weight would be more than 300 times as great as on Earth!
The same thing it is on Earth or anywhere else in the universe . . . the characteristic
of space-time that causes forces of attraction between every two masses.
Gravity on Jupiter is much greater than on Earth because Jupiter is a larger planet, and therefore has much more gravitational pull. Therefore, if you weighed 100 pounds on the Earth, on Jupiter, you would weigh 236.4 pounds. But also the gravitational pull does not count on the size of a planet. While Jupiter is much larger than the Earth, it has a little more than two times the Earth's mass. Saturn, if submerged in water, will actually float because it is less dense than water. Here are more statistics on what a 100 pound person would weigh on other bodies in space:
Mercury: 37.8 lbs
Venus: 90.7 lbs
Mars: 37.7 lbs
Our Moon: 16.6 lbs
Saturn: 106.4 lbs
Uranus: 88.9 lbs
Neptune: 112.5 lbs
Pluto: 6.7 lbs
The Sun: 2,707.2 lbs
White Dwarf Star: 130,000,000 lbs
Neutron Star: 14,000,000,000,000 lbs
Earth gravity x 2.528. ( Wikipedia, Jupiter ).
24.79 m/s2 or 2.528 times the gravity of Earth The gravity on Jupiter is greater than the gravity on Earth because Jupiter is more massive. Although Jupiter is a great deal larger in size, its surface gravity is just 2.4 times that of the surface gravity of Earth. This is because Jupiter is mostly made up of gases. If you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 214 pounds on Jupiter.
Io is a moon of Jupiter, not a planet. Surface gravity is about 18% of the gravity on Earth.
The answer is actually Jupiter.The acceleration due to gravity is greater on the surface of Jupiter than it isat the surface of any other planet in our solar system (assuming that a surfacecan be defined for each planet).
The force of gravity on the surface of Jupiter is about 24.79 m/s^2, which is about 2.5 times stronger than the force of gravity on Earth. This stronger gravitational pull is due to Jupiter's larger mass and size compared to Earth.
Earth gravity x 2.528. ( Wikipedia, Jupiter ).
Despite the fact that Uranus has a mass 14.5 times Earth's mass, its surface gravity isless thanEarth's.Jupiter and Neptune both have more "surface gravity" than Earth.
24.79 m/s2 or 2.528 times the gravity of Earth The gravity on Jupiter is greater than the gravity on Earth because Jupiter is more massive. Although Jupiter is a great deal larger in size, its surface gravity is just 2.4 times that of the surface gravity of Earth. This is because Jupiter is mostly made up of gases. If you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 214 pounds on Jupiter.
The acceleration of gravity at the 'surface' of Jupiter is 2.639 times its value at the Earth's surface.
due to the liquid hydrogen core in the middle of Jupiter, the planet has a lot of gravity
Jupiter
100lb
2.36%
I think it's about 2.528 times as great on Jupiter.
No. The gravity of Jupiter more than twice as strong as that on Earth.
At the surface, it is 2.64 times its value at the Earth's surface.
The simple answer is yes. The real answer is very complicated. Jupiter has a "surface gravity" of about 2.5 times that of the Earth's.