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 is, essentially, the body's resistance to change. An example sentence would be: Without inertia, we would be all over the place.
It does not "take place" it is a property of a mass in motion.
The inertia of the pen tends to hold it in place when the paper moves.
Inertia
Inertia is associated with mass
Nope. While weight is proportional to both mass and the local gravitational field or acceleration, inertia (and by extension momentum) is related only to mass - and special types of inertia, such as rotational inertia, is related only to the distribution of mass (bunched up mass has less rotational inertia than the same amount of mass, only spread out).
Inertia is, essentially, the body's resistance to change. An example sentence would be: Without inertia, we would be all over the place.
Inertia and gravity
It does not "take place" it is a property of a mass in motion.
everywhere Anything having the property of mass has inertia, so except for a few exotic subatomic particles, everything has the property of inertia.
inertia
Gravity, inertia, and gravitational force.
Ozone levels do vary place to place. Equator has the maximum amount of ozone.
Inertia.
They vary from place to place. You need to be more specific.
There are actually 3 kinds of inertia. They are as follows : 1. Inertia of Rest 2. Inertia of Motion 3. Inertia of Direction But nowadays people consider that there are 2 kinds of inertia , inertia of rest and inertia of motion.
The inertia of the pen tends to hold it in place when the paper moves.