yes as long as your muscle mass does not change.
mass
Any amount of force, no matter how large or small, will increase or decrease the speed of any mass, no matter how large or small. But if you specify how much you want the object's speed changed and how quickly you want it done, then you have specified the acceleration you want. In that case, the larger the mass is, the more force it will take to accomplish that assignment.
momentum As the speed of a rolling ball is increasing, the increasing speed is accompanied by: a. increasing momentum.
Force is mass x acceleration so in order to increase the acceleration without increasing the force, you must decrease the mass.
you increase or decrease mass by taking the mass out
(mass) Density is mass/volume, so increasing the volume with mass held constant will decrease the density.
the speed decrease if increasing load..in star connection the speed lower
Mass has no effect on torque. Torque is the product of distance (from the axis), force, and an angular function. Mass can, however, make the turbine more stable - it will take longer to react to variations in wind. More mass will increase the MOMENT OF INERTIA (rotational inertia).
mass
Increasing the speed of an object will increase its momentum as well (momentum=mass*velocity).
Any amount of force, no matter how large or small, will increase or decrease the speed of any mass, no matter how large or small. But if you specify how much you want the object's speed changed and how quickly you want it done, then you have specified the acceleration you want. In that case, the larger the mass is, the more force it will take to accomplish that assignment.
increasing in mass at a great speed
If you're talking about an electric motor, increasing the frequency will increase the speed of rotation of the motor, and decreasing the frequency will decrease the speed of rotation of the motor. The other way of controlling a motor is to control the current; increasing the current increases speed, decreasing current decreases speed.
the balls decrease in speed
increase tranfer rate and decrease average access time
Increasing the temperature will increase the speed. Remember Dalton's theory: Particles at a higher temperature tend to move faster on average than particles at a lower temperature.
Stability depends on to proton/neutron ratio; and this ratio increase with the atomic number.