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They are the same weight but the feathers take up a lot more space.
Probably not unless you do it On something, but what do I know? I haven't been in space :P
More Space. It in continuous.
By looking at radioactive isotopes. These isotopes decay at precisely known rates, so looking at ratios involving such isotopes can tell when an asteroid or other object formed.
Something that shows a limit.
The larger and heavier something is, the harder it is to get into space. The more weight you put into a spacecraft, the more fuel you need. And on top of that, you need additional fuel to get that fuel into space, so the need for fuel increases exponentially with the weight of the spacecraft.
Three points can determine a plane but not 3-d space.
Hydrogen , Helium and a few heavier elements.
when they go in space there is no gravity. no gravity makes you lighter that is how an astronaut can wear a suit that is heavier than them
Yes, most heavier elements are made in dieing stars.
Weight is how heavy something is and mass is how much space something takes up.
Djs
It is not heavier, it is "denser" that is because its molecules move around less and thus take up less space.
You would experience weightlessness but your mass would not change.
The space is not relavent to the measurement, the density would be relavent to space/weight. A smaler atom can be more densethan larger atom but never heavier.
Basically, the gravity of the Earth prevents the heavier elements from escaping into space.
something that takes up space junk