The 'pull of gravity' can be measured with readily-available equipment.
Here's how to do it:
-- Borrow a bathroom scale.
-- Place scale on a hard, flat, level surface.
-- Place the unknown object on the scale.
-- Read scale display.
-- Record in notebook.
-- Return to lab with notebook.
-- The quantity noted represents the magnitude of the mutual gravitational forces
between the earth and the object under study.
-- Send scale to the Smithsonian.
-- Eat the object under study.
-- Add graphs, charts, formulas, and descriptions of method of procedure.
-- Publish.
the measurement is called the specific gravity it works my measuring the wight of something towards its wight in water
The force is the Newton unit in SI. For gravity the force is the weight of the object in Newtons
A spring force scale measures the downward pull on a spring exerted by a force, usually gravity acting on a weight.
The simplest answer is quite obviously mass, the heavier an object, the greater the pull of gravity. In fact in physics terminology, weight means the force by which you will be attracted towards the center of the earth. Also Newton's Law of universal gravitation states that the pull of gravity equal the product of the masses of the two bodies involved divided by the square of the distance by which they are apart.
The term acceleration due to gravity refers to the effects of the earth's gravitational pull on the body. It would differ if one was to be measuring it on other planets such as the Moon, Jupiter or Pluto.
the pull of gravity on a camera is its weight
A measuring cup is used to measure volumes of liquids or powders.
Weight is a measure of how strongly gravity attracts an object. Earth isn't the only thing that has gravity; all physical objects have gravity.
Mass is the amount of matter or molecules that a specific object is composed of. Weight is the measure of gravity's pull on you. Does this help answer your question?
The pull of gravity is what pulls things down. This is on lots of planets.
You need to specify what the liquid is that you are measuring. The liter is a measure of volume, and the stone is a measure of weight. Liquids with different measures of specific gravity (similar to measures of mass for solids) will fill different volumes at the same weight.
No. Mass is a way of measuring how much matter an object contains, whereas weight measures how hard gravity is pulling on an object. While on earth, these are typically interchangeable. However, if you were to go to Mars, your mass would stay the same, but the weight will be different. This is because you still contain the same amount of matter, but the gravity's pull will be different because the Moon has a different gravitational pull than the Earth.