Physics, asked by anuraggmailcom5066, 6 months ago

Jupiter’s strength of gravity is greater than Earth’s strength of gravity.

Answers

Answered by prashantguptasonu972
0

Answer:

no, both gravity are different

Answered by Mary5378
2

Answer:

  1. Jupiter's surface gravity is also higher, but only about 2.5 times as high as Earth's, because its greater mass is mostly offset by its much greater radius.

  1. Jupiter's surface gravity is also higher, but only about 2.5 times as high as Earth's, because its greater mass is mostly offset by its much greater radius.Perhaps you're thinking of Saturn? It also has much more mass and therefore gravity, however its surface gravity is slightly less than Earth's because, like Jupiter, it has a much greater radius than Earth.

  1. Jupiter's surface gravity is also higher, but only about 2.5 times as high as Earth's, because its greater mass is mostly offset by its much greater radius.Perhaps you're thinking of Saturn? It also has much more mass and therefore gravity, however its surface gravity is slightly less than Earth's because, like Jupiter, it has a much greater radius than Earth.A celestial body's surface gravity can be calculated in two ways:

Jupiter's surface gravity is also higher, but only about 2.5 times as high as Earth's, because its greater mass is mostly offset by its much greater radius.Perhaps you're thinking of Saturn? It also has much more mass and therefore gravity, however its surface gravity is slightly less than Earth's because, like Jupiter, it has a much greater radius than Earth.A celestial body's surface gravity can be calculated in two ways:Mass divided by radius (or diameter) squared

  1. Jupiter's surface gravity is also higher, but only about 2.5 times as high as Earth's, because its greater mass is mostly offset by its much greater radius.Perhaps you're thinking of Saturn? It also has much more mass and therefore gravity, however its surface gravity is slightly less than Earth's because, like Jupiter, it has a much greater radius than Earth.A celestial body's surface gravity can be calculated in two ways:Mass divided by radius (or diameter) squaredRadius (or diameter) multiplied by density

Jupiter's surface gravity is also higher, but only about 2.5 times as high as Earth's, because its greater mass is mostly offset by its much greater radius.Perhaps you're thinking of Saturn? It also has much more mass and therefore gravity, however its surface gravity is slightly less than Earth's because, like Jupiter, it has a much greater radius than Earth.A celestial body's surface gravity can be calculated in two ways:Mass divided by radius (or diameter) squaredRadius (or diameter) multiplied by densityAs long as you're using multiples of Earth's mass, radius, diameter, and density as units, these are equivalent. Gas giants tend to have much lower density than rocky planets (around one-fifth), so smaller gas giants can easily have lower surface gravity than Earth, let alone a super R .

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