mass and inertia are the same thing.
Newton's second law of motion states that an object's acceleration is directly related to the net force applied and inversely related to the mass of the object.
inertia is the laziness of an object, or an objects resistance to change its state of motion, or how easy it is to start or stop an object. Mass is the measure of an object's inertia. Therefore with more mass, an object has more inertia.
It means how hard it is to get a body moving, or to stop it once it is moving. The inertia is directly related to a body's mass.
That is called inertia. Inertia is directly related to mass, so it can be expressed in kilograms.
No, an object's acceleration is inversely proportional to an objects mass.
Inertia is directly related to mass. More mass means more inertia.
If the mass of an object increases, the amount of inertia increases as well.
Inertia is related to the mass, and it is proportional to the mass. When measuring things, you will usually measure the mass, not the inertia - but it basically amounts to the same. Just consider the mass to be what gives an object its inertia.
Newton's second law of motion states that an object's acceleration is directly related to the net force applied and inversely related to the mass of the object.
inertia is the laziness of an object, or an objects resistance to change its state of motion, or how easy it is to start or stop an object. Mass is the measure of an object's inertia. Therefore with more mass, an object has more inertia.
It means how hard it is to get a body moving, or to stop it once it is moving. The inertia is directly related to a body's mass.
That is called inertia. Inertia is directly related to mass, so it can be expressed in kilograms.
Could be one of two things: * Inertia; * Gravitational attraction. Both apply to all matter and are directly related to the mass.
i think the property of matter inertia is related to is its mass.......the more the mass the less will be the inertia.....
It depends on the object's mass.
matter is not related to inertia. Mass is.
No, an object's acceleration is inversely proportional to an objects mass.