The answer is Earth's surface gravity is a bit stronger than Uranus's.
Uranus has an acceleration due to gravity of about 8.7m/s², whereas Earth has an acceleration due to gravity of about 9.8m/s².
The approximate conversion for weight from Earth to Uranus would be
Earth weight x 0.889.
If you weighed 100lb on Earth you would weigh about 88.9lb on Uranus.
Source: NASA's "Planetary Fact Sheet".
Uranus has a mass somewhere around 8.7 * 10^26 kg, which is about 140 times the mass of Earth. However, its radius is also much larger than Earth's (about 8.1 times that of Earth). When you plug these numbers into the Universal Gravitation Law equation, you get an acceleration due to gravity of about 7.8 m/s^2. Earth's acceleration due to gravity is 9.81 m/s^2. Thus, Uranus's gravity is somewhat weaker than Earth's.
Uranus' gravity compared to earth is 89% of what you would expreience on Earth.
The mass of planetary objects is extremely easy to compare to earth, because the mass of earth is used as a unit of measurement for such things. Uranus, for example, is measured as 14.54 Earth mass.
earth density is 5.515 g/cm3 and the density of uranus is 1.30 g/cm3
The mass of Uranus is 14.537 times greater than the mass of the Earth.
No. Uranus's gravity is 8.7m/s2, which is less than Earth's gravitational force of 9.8m/s2.
Uranus's year is approximately 456.445 Earth years.
if we were to be on uranus the gravity would be 89% of what we get on earth.
The equatorial diameter of the planet Uranus is 51,118 km(31,763 miles). The equatorial diameter of the planet Earth is 12,576 km (7,926 miles).Because of its thicker atmosphere, Uranus is therefore 4 times as wide as Earth, and its volume 63 times that of Earth. However, its much lower average density means that Uranus has only about 14 times Earth's mass.
Gravity is a correlation of mass. Uranus is many times larger than Earth. Therefore, the gravity on Uranus is much stronger than Earth's gravity.
The acceleration due to gravity of Uranus at its "surface" is about 8.69 m/s2. On Earth is it 9.8 m/s2. This means that Earth's gravity is about 13% larger than Uranus's gravity. Uranus is more massive than Earth, but mass is only half of what makes a gravitational pull. Uranus's gravitational pull is smaller that Earth's because it's "surface" is farther away from it's center.
The mass of Uranus is about 14.5 times the mass of earth.
The four gas giants: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, all have more mass than the Earth.
Uranus's year is approximately 456.445 Earth years.
The volume of Uranus is 63 times that of the Earth.
The diameter of Uranus is approximately three times that of the Earth.
Uranus has a gravity which is 0.89 times that of the Earth.
if we were to be on uranus the gravity would be 89% of what we get on earth.
Uranus has a slightly weaker "surface gravity" compared with the Earth.
The mass on Venus compared to Earth is 80%.
As compared to Earth the density of URANUS is less, since Uranus is one among the gaseous planets.
The equatorial diameter of the planet Uranus is 51,118 km(31,763 miles). The equatorial diameter of the planet Earth is 12,576 km (7,926 miles).Because of its thicker atmosphere, Uranus is therefore 4 times as wide as Earth, and its volume 63 times that of Earth. However, its much lower average density means that Uranus has only about 14 times Earth's mass.
The equatorial diameter of the planet Uranus is 51,118 km(31,763 miles). The equatorial diameter of the planet Earth is 12,576 km (7,926 miles).Because of its thicker atmosphere, Uranus is therefore 4 times as wide as Earth, and its volume 63 times that of Earth. However, its much lower average density means that Uranus has only about 14 times Earth's mass.