No. "Mass" is the stuff an object is made of, and never changes.
"Weight" is the force of gravity between the object and another mass.
Weight depends on what the other mass is, and how far the object is from it.
That's why the same mass has different weights on the earth and moon.
Mass and weight are not forces.But weight or a pull of gravity of an object with mass has force
No. Mass is independent of gravity, but weight is a function of gravity and mass.
Anything with mass has weight; air has mass, therefore it has weight.
The weight is dependent on the mass. Mass is the same everywhere but since weight is mass * acceleration due to gravity, weight is the dependent variable.
Mass is the mass, weight is mass with gravity acting upon it
Basically by weighing it. Although mass is not the same as weight, if you know the weight and the gravity, you can calculate the mass.Basically by weighing it. Although mass is not the same as weight, if you know the weight and the gravity, you can calculate the mass.Basically by weighing it. Although mass is not the same as weight, if you know the weight and the gravity, you can calculate the mass.Basically by weighing it. Although mass is not the same as weight, if you know the weight and the gravity, you can calculate the mass.
Your mass will not but your weight will.
weight and mass measures the volume
Weight in Newtons Mass in kilograms
As the mass increases, the weight also increases correspondingly as the weight is directly proportional to the mass
Mass is an intrinsic property of matter. Weight is the apparent weight of a mass under a particular acceleration.
Weight= massxg. Therefor, according to the formula, everything having mass will also have weight.