Yard stick meter stick
Different objects contain different amounts of matter, even if they are the same size. Therefore, two objects of the same size can have different masses.
No
length of the printer
Heat always flows from warmer objects to cooler objects, unless you have a device (like a heat pump) to prevent this. The natural tendency is for two or more objects at different temperatures to eventually all have the same temperature and this is accomplished by heat flowing from the warmer objects to the cooler objects.
The answer to this question is no. Radiation can occur when objects are not touching
You measure the length of two objects, then you divide the lengths.You measure the length of two objects, then you divide the lengths.You measure the length of two objects, then you divide the lengths.You measure the length of two objects, then you divide the lengths.
Two Fifty Paise coins, Two notebooks of the same length, Two Maps of the same scale, Two bangles, Two stamp postages on postcards, Two boxes, Two Mats of the same length, Two window panes of the same measurement, Two doors of the same size, A Pyramids' sides.And so on...
The difference in expansion of two objects having different length and heated in same temperature difference is called differential expansion.
the anwer i $%&/#$%
You can measure the length of an object or the distance between two objects.
If the two objects are the same size and made of exactly the same amount of the exact same stuff then no.
Two objects has got same mass means the mass of both the objects is same. It does not comment any thing about the volume of the objects. If the density of the two objects is same, then only their volume will be same. If both the objects are not made up of the same material, they have most likely to have different volume. Rarely it may be same.
No. Two objects could have the same density but they also could not. If the two objects were not made from the same substance they would not have the same density. Although if they did then they would have the same density.
If two line segments are congruent then they have the same length.
They will expand by the same percentage, but that percentage, of course, results in more actual length of expansion on the longer object.
A rhombus, I believe.
It is an isosceles triangle when two of its three sides are of the same length.