That would depend on the substance's phase. For solids and liquids, the relation is directly proportional, because as you fill up a beaker with water, it begins to weigh more. For gases, it is complicated because gases have a tendency to distribute themselves equally inside their containers, making volume measurements not very useful. Gases are generally quantified using the ideal gas law (PV=nRT) to find an amount of moles.
Yes mass and volume are directly proportional. If density remains constant, then adding mass will force the volume to increase. If volume decreased or remained constant in such a situation, the density would increase.
Mass and weight are directly proportional
Mass is kilograms and weight is Newtons
Mass = kilograms
Weight = Newtons = kilograms x gravity (9.81 m/sec^2 on average, on planet Earth)
the answer is three...3...
You weigh an object to determine its mass. Weight is directly proportional to mass, and in fact most balances are calibrated in mass units such as kilograms.
Gravity is directly proportional to mass.
Yes, both do. Density = Mass/Volume, So density is directly proportional to mass and inversely proportional to volume.
kinetic energy, K.E = 1/2 mv^2 that is, it is directly proportional to mass, assuming velocity to be constant and is directly proportional to square of velocity assuming mass to be constant.
no
Yes, weight is directly proportional to mass, on earth weight = mass X 9.8 or sometimes it is simplified to 10, the unit for weight is newtons (N)
As the mass increases, the weight also increases correspondingly as the weight is directly proportional to the mass
Yes, weight is directly proportional to mass, on earth weight = mass X 9.8 or sometimes it is simplified to 10, the unit for weight is newtons (N)
weight = mass x gravity
weight and mass
Force is directly proportional to mass provided the acceleration is constant.
Weight = mass x acceleration due to gravity As acceleration due to gravity remains constant at a given place, weight becomes proportional to the mass
No, an object's acceleration is inversely proportional to an objects mass.
true or false. weight and mass are proportional but not equal
The volume of a gas is not directly proportional to its molecular weight.
You weigh an object to determine its mass. Weight is directly proportional to mass, and in fact most balances are calibrated in mass units such as kilograms.
directly proportional because force=(mass)(acceleration) (f=ma)