Yes. you weight depends on gravity.
When it is free from gravity!
Weight is gravity's effect on mass. That is why weight is not generally used in science, because it varies slightly at different places on Earth, and differs tremendously on other celestial bodies and is zero in space. Mass is a constant.
Velocity refers to the rate of change in distance of an object, and also the direction of the change, where speed just refers to the rate of change without regard to the direction, so if the object moved at all, it would have an average speed greater than zero, so No.
Rankine
Work = force x distance. With a distance of zero, the work will also be zero.
can a body have zero velocity and still be accelerating
Weight is gravity's effect on mass. That is why weight is not generally used in science, because it varies slightly at different places on Earth, and differs tremendously on other celestial bodies and is zero in space. Mass is a constant.
Universality is a fundamental principle in physics - the same laws of physics apply everywhere at all times. So if the mass of something on earth is zero (such as the rest mass of a photon), then the mass will be zero everywhere in the universe, disregarding the effects of relativistic mass. Do not confuse mass with weight - mass is invariable - it is the same everywhere. Weight, however, diminishes in proportion to the square of the distance you travel away from the center of planet earth.
In most cases, physics deals with finite quantities rather than zero, but zero does come up at times. The start of an event can be measured as zero hour. A superconductor has zero electrical resistance. There are doubtlessly other cases as well. Zero is a useful concept.
The shed is of zero mass and zero weight
Velocity refers to the rate of change in distance of an object, and also the direction of the change, where speed just refers to the rate of change without regard to the direction, so if the object moved at all, it would have an average speed greater than zero, so No.
The operating weight plus (+) the cargo weight equals (=) the zero fuel weight.
no
Rankine
Work = force x distance. With a distance of zero, the work will also be zero.
"Weight" refers to the force of gravity acting on an object.
Mass and weight are different notions in a correct physics terminology.
Zero points :-)