If it's moving in relation to you, then yes.
If the mass of an object increases, the amount of inertia increases as well.
inertia is a plant
No. An object that has a lot of mass and is hard to move has inertia.
matter is not related to inertia. Mass is.
No. The weight by an object is related to the object's mass. Inertia is a separate effect, also due to mass - but there is no such thing as a "pull of inertia".
Nothing gives an object inertia. Inertia is not a force. It is just the tendency of an object to continue in its motion if there is no force acting upon it.
Zero gravity does not affect inertia. The inertia of an object is an inherent property of the object and is directly proportional to the object's mass.
inertia. the more mass an object has, the greater its inertia. what do you call it when an object refuses a object in motion?
Inertia is the resistance of any physical object to a change in its state of motion. It is represented numerically by an object's mass. The more mass an object has, the greater its inertia.
Inertia does not vary from place to place. Inertia is simply the tendency of an object to resist changing its state. Inertia (and, by extension, momentum) only vary in relation to the mass of an object, not where the object is located.
Inertia refers to the resistance of an object when there is a change in the motion of the object. The more inertia the object has, the more mass it will have.
An objects mass is a measure of its inertia.