yes
no. it's the other way around. muscle is heavier than fat. muscle weighs approximately 17.7% more than fat.
muscle is heavier :>
muscle is more dense, hence heavier.
No. Fat and muscle are different substances. If you lose weight, then muscles that were previously hidden by a layer of fat may be revealed, which can create the illusion of muscles coming from fat.
no they are the sane
muscle weighs heavier than fat so you are turning fat to muscle.
Yes. Losing fat and gaining muscle will cause your body to become heavier as fat weighs twice that of muscle, and your size will remain the same.
Working out does decrease fat. Done correctly, a skinny guy would also gain muscle mass. He could actually be heavier with muscle.
You could be gaining muscle. Muscle is heavier than fat and take up less space than fat. That's what is going on with me i recently started working out and i was a 100 pounds and gained 16.
Men do tend to have more muscle but aside from that they also have bigger, denser and heavier bones. They are also usually taller as well. But even if a woman and man had the same amount of muscle and fat and were the same height men's bones are bigger.
first off its not spelt like that...and it makes you gain weight for one its made for muscle mass and muscle is heavier than fat... and 2 it has allot of protein in it wich is helps build muscle mass to and protein is very fating. you can turn fat into muscle allot faster than you can just gaining straight muscle
Well if you lift weights you gain muscle right, well muscle has weight so if you gain a pound of muscle your not getting heavier your just building muscle. Bodybuilders on average weigh 200 to 280 pounds but they don't carry that extra weight in fat but they carry it in muscle. But since fat burns 60 calories a day muscle burns close to 110 calories a day so ultimately that muscle will burn all that fat you want to burn.But if you weigh 500 pounds your not extremely muscular you just fat.