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depends on the ball you are using!
This depends on whether you consider what is inside the balloon to be a part of the balloon, since the weight of the balloon skin will remain the same regardless of what is inside it. If, however, you consider the contents of the balloon to constitute a part of the balloon's mass then it will always be heavier when inflated, regardless of the density of the substance with which it is inflated. However, in this case the density of the balloon will fall when inflated if the contents are less dense than the material of the balloon, which is highly likely since the substance would probably be a gas. Therefore the balloon would be heavier but less dense.
Objects have different mass because they not weighted the same..
Mass= # of particles/ matter weight= the force of gravity Examples: your mass is the same on every planet, Your weight is different on different planets
Mass is the amount of matter, volume is the amount of space, and density uses both, it is mass / volume.
an inflated because it takes up more room than a deflated one It depends on how you define the basketball. If you define it as just the rubber, then the mass does not change when it is inflated. If you consider the air inside the ball to be part of the ball then adding more air adds more mass. Mass is "stuff". Air has mass because air is stuff.
It certainly would be heavier. Air has mass and will add weight.
depends on the ball you are using!
we can say that air has mass and it occupies space by a small activity: take an inflated balloon and if we press it we can see that it is difficult to press becuse it hs mass and occupies the space avialable
Yes, there is more mass in an inflated balloon than a deflated one. The difference is the gas that was used to inflate the balloon. The gas may not weigh very much, but it does make a difference.
density(d)=mass(m)/(divided by) volume(v) take a filled ballon take a jar filled to the top push the ballon to the bottom and then catch water that falls out how ever much falls out is your volume then divide it by your mass/weight
Anything that is physically there (rocks, empty boxes, dog, water, air, inflated balloons etc) has mass.
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
mass involves weight....volume is size. A ballon and a loaf of bread may have the same volume (occupy the same space) , but the bread has more volume.
The gas inside the inflated balloon has mass. At standard atmospheric conditions at sea level air weighs approximately one kilogram per cubic metre. A 10 passenger hot air balloon has an inflated volume of about 9000 cubic metres so the air inside the balloon weighs around nine tonnes!
When you convert the helium with a positive ion ratio the atomic mass 1 of hydrogen is inflated at the inverse of mass 4, giving it the mass of 3 which deflects in a the smaller since of the word.
This depends on whether you consider what is inside the balloon to be a part of the balloon, since the weight of the balloon skin will remain the same regardless of what is inside it. If, however, you consider the contents of the balloon to constitute a part of the balloon's mass then it will always be heavier when inflated, regardless of the density of the substance with which it is inflated. However, in this case the density of the balloon will fall when inflated if the contents are less dense than the material of the balloon, which is highly likely since the substance would probably be a gas. Therefore the balloon would be heavier but less dense.