If fired with the same momentum yes it does effect the penetration
weight
weight
You can change the weight of an object by altering its mass or the force acting on it. Increasing the mass of the object will increase its weight, while decreasing the force acting on it will decrease its weight.
"Draw weight" is a measure of the strength required to draw a bow as well as the force it imparts on the arrows it shoots. It is usually measured in pounds.
Change the magnitude of one or more forces. Change the direction of one or more forces. Add or remove a force acting on the object.
Forces can be shown in a diagram using arrows. The length and direction of the arrows represent the magnitude and direction of the force, respectively. You can label the arrows with the type of force and its value if known.
When force arrows are in opposite directions, you subtract the smaller force from the larger force to find the net force acting on the object.
Weight is gravitational force on an objects Mass. Mass don't change when gravity changes but the weight does.
Weight is gravitational force on an objects Mass. Mass don't change when gravity changes but the weight does.
Weight. The force of weight experienced by an object can change when the acceleration due to gravity changes. Weight is directly proportional to the acceleration due to gravity, so an increase or decrease in gravity will result in a corresponding change in weight.
To propel there arrows father and with more force.
Gravitational force does not change the mass (kilograms)of an object. It merely changes the force at which one object is attracted to the other. This means it's weight (newtons) is raised. The formula for weight is Mass x Force of Gravity, which is why thing seem to weigh less on the moon, their mass does not change, only their apparent weight.