NO, weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object. Weight=mass x gravity
Depending how you interpret "quantity of matter", that can refer either to the mass (expressed in kilograms), or the number of moles.
mass is the quantity of matter in an object the kilogram (kg) is used to measure mass
You might call it that; though the term "quantity of matter" is also used for the number of moles. Mass is what gives objects inertia - making it difficult to speed a moving object up, or to slow it down. Mass also gives an object weight in a gravitational field (weight = mass x gravity).
Mass and Matter are actually the same thing to be honest. - Actually, there is a useful distinction. Let's use the mousetrap as an example. If I set it, it has more mass due to the energy I've put into it. E/c^2=m So the mass has increased, but it still has the same amount of fundamental "matter" particles (electrons and quarks).
The quantity that is measured in Newtons is force.
Mass is a quantity that describes the concentration of matter. Mass is an aggregate measure of matter and it also determines the weight of an object.
Mass
Mass is the measure of the quantity of matter.
The mole. It is defined as the number of molecules that are in 12 grams of carbon-12, which is roughly equal to the Avogadro constant 6.02214179×10²³. Since the force of gravity is proportional to the mass of an object, the weight of an object can be used as measure of the matter it contains..
mass (:
Depending how you interpret "quantity of matter", that can refer either to the mass (expressed in kilograms), or the number of moles.
i think mass :)
That would be the volume.
mass is the quantity of matter in an object the kilogram (kg) is used to measure mass
the quantity of matter can be measured by its volume (a measuring flask), weight (a beam balance), and count (tally). ============================
weight
gram or kilogram