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No. It will affect the distance the water rises, but not the volume of displacement.
Only if it's falling through air. If it's just the falling object and gravity, then no.
The size of a rugby player does not affect gravity in any way.
if an object is lightr it will fall slower because gravity wont take it down as fast if it is heavier it will make the gravity pull it down faster
It does not. Mass is independent of where an object is. Weight, however, will vary in direct proportion to the planet's gravity.
Size does not but mass does.
Speed, shape and frontal cross-section. Viscosity, texture, friction, gravity, velocity, size, and shape can all affect air resistance.
The one with the biggest mass and smallest size has.
by size,volume and gravity
The one with the biggest mass and smallest size has.
Speed, shape and frontal cross-section. Viscosity, texture, friction, gravity, velocity, size, and shape can all affect air resistance.
The location of an object's center of gravity depends on the object's shape, and on how its mass is distributed throughout its shape, but not on its size. The center of gravity of a homogeneous sphere is at the center of the sphere, no matter whether the sphere's radius is 1 millimeter or 1 light year.