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No. It isn't the size alone, but the density. A block of steel may be exactly the same size as a block of wood, but the steel is denser and therefore heavier.
Yes. And objects with different sizes, masses, and weights also fall the same.
If the two objects are the same size and made of exactly the same amount of the exact same stuff then no.
No. A balloon that is HUGE is lighter than a brick of the same or even smaller size.
Well if they are made of the same materials then the density should be a constant or "the same."
not always it depends
Different objects contain different amounts of matter, even if they are the same size. Therefore, two objects of the same size can have different masses.
Similar objects.
No. It isn't the size alone, but the density. A block of steel may be exactly the same size as a block of wood, but the steel is denser and therefore heavier.
Such objects are said to be congruent.
Yes. And objects with different sizes, masses, and weights also fall the same.
Congruent
If the two objects are the same size and made of exactly the same amount of the exact same stuff then no.
Density.
Space is the separation of objects. Two objects cannot occupy the same place at the same time. It is also what gives objects size and shape. It is how we measure objects.
Two objects having both the same size and shaped could be said to be 'congruent'.
Objects are congruent if they are the same size and shape, or an exact reflection of one another. If objects are not congruent, they are dissimilar in either size, shape or both.