accelaraion or gravity x mass of object = force due to gravity on object = weight of an object Therefore if the gravity on an object increases, its weight (force of gravity on the object) also increases. This is separate from the concept of mass (the amount of matter somthing possesses), which is constant regardless of the effect of gravity.
the gravitational force have greater effect on earth rather than on space .the person weight lose to 1/6 th at moon and the gravitation force is less to keep him balace on moon so he move frequently.
Depends on the object and where it is. If it's immersed in a fluid then higher temperatures can make the atoms go more apart, making the object less dense. Same mass, but less weight, and less denser objects or collection of atoms weight less in fluids than denser objects (of the same atomic material).
The effect would be very small for solid objects immersed in air, though.
Only in an insignificant amount. According to the Special Theory of Relativity, any increase in energy is associated with an increase in mass. And of course, if the mass increases, so will the weight.
No. Temperature or heat is a form of energy and cannot affect the mass hence weight of a body. It does however change the volume thereby changing the density of a body.
weight is the force gravity exerts on an object. Therefore, it means that the greater weight an object has, the greater force is needed to move it in the opposite direction.
Gravity affects weight, it does not affect mass.
No it does not, but it might affect the volume of the object (it might shrink or expand).
It is not the weight of the immersed object but the volume of the object would affect the buoyant force on the immersed object because the buoyant force is nothing but the weight of the displaced liquid whose volume is equal to that of the immersed object.
Yes. Mass is constant for a given object. Weight is a function of mass and gravity, stronger gravity more weight.
Weight is how great or small the affect of gravity is on an object, whereas mass is the amount of physical particles in an object.
Yes, when the object is submerged in water then water exerts opposite buoyonci force which decrease the weight of object.
Gravity affects weight, it does not affect mass.
No it does not, but it might affect the volume of the object (it might shrink or expand).
Temperature does not affect the weight of an object. That is, unless you burn it or boil it.
The location like moon will affect its weight but not the mass
Only the object's mass.
It is not the weight of the immersed object but the volume of the object would affect the buoyant force on the immersed object because the buoyant force is nothing but the weight of the displaced liquid whose volume is equal to that of the immersed object.
Yes. Mass is constant for a given object. Weight is a function of mass and gravity, stronger gravity more weight.
weight is the force gravity exerts on an object. Therefore, it means that the greater weight an object has, the greater force is needed to move it in the opposite direction.
yes By snerderwerder (my nickname)
Not at all. (The buoyancy force equals the weight if the displaced water,)
Weight is how great or small the affect of gravity is on an object, whereas mass is the amount of physical particles in an object.