mass is a substance so mass takes up space so it technallly could be a chair a mountain a glass of water or a flower
If you multiply an object's mass by the acceleration of gravity, g, you can determine its weight. If you know an object's weight and divide by g, you can determine its mass. g = 9.8 m/s2 or 32.2 ft/s2 (on Earth)
On Earth, you weigh it. In space you must determine its inertia ... usually done by noting its orbit around another object.
Gravity determines the weight of an object. This is different from mass which stays constant regardless of gravitational pull. This explains why astronauts become "weightless" in outer space even though there mass is the same.
Mass doesn't change when gravity is applied. Mass: The amount of matter in an object VS. Weight: The force of gravity on an object. Example: A cow is 800 kg on Earth, and 800 kg on the moon because you are not changing what the cow is made of.
The mass of an object that weighs 39.2N on earth is 4kg
No. Mass is the weight of an object on earth. Scientists use mass instead of weight so the measurements will be the same everywhere. For example A big ballon has a relatively lower mass than a small sized stone
On earth, this object has a mass of 25.82kg
A balance or scale is used to determine the mass of an object. The object is placed on the balance and its mass is measured in units such as grams or kilograms.
At the earth's surface, the object's mass is 0.78kg
The two factors, assuming in our earth planet, are object mass and its height away from the earth ground or any selected zero level.
The mass of an object that weighs 600N on earth is 61.18kg
The mass divided my the volume determine the density of an object