No. Mass is the amount of material in your body. Your weight is determined by gravity, and will increase as gravity increases, but the actual mass of your body is not affected by gravity.
False, because tons of matter falls into our gravity well every day.
It is true that mass and gravity are proportional to one another.
When there is less gravity, there is less gas is this true or false
In the metric (SI) system, the term massis used instead ofweight. Weight is a measure of how heavy something is, whereas mass is a measure of the amount of matter. To illustrate, something that weighs 60 pounds on the earth would only weigh about 10 pounds on the moon (due to the lower gravity of the moon), whereas something the has a mass of 60 Kilograms on the earth would still have a mass of 60 kilograms on the moon (as the amount of matter is unchanged). Consequently, the statement that 1 kilogram is 2.21 pounds is true here on earth but not elsewhere (a point mainly of interest to scientists).
No, gravity doesn't cause the Earth's rotation.
True
Its true.
True
yes it is true
true
No, that's not true. All planets, moons, and stars have gravity. Actually all objects have gravity, it's just not very strong for small objects.
True. Assuming you can ignore air resistance, the acceleration for any object is approximately 9.8 meters per second squared.