Temperature can affect the mass of something and also freezing the object.
Temperature does not affect mass on a balance directly. its effect is simply a faulty reading for weighing something that is too hot.
Mass doesn't affect speed directly; it only affects momentum and acceleration directly. The equations are Force = mass x acceleration. The heavier it is, the more force you have to exert to accelerate something. The other one is momentum = mass x velocity (or speed). The more mass something has, the lower the momentum. But the point I'm trying to make here is that it affects speed in the end -- the more mass something has, the less the speed -- but that's IN THE END. It doesn't really affect it directly, but indirectly. Sorry for not being able to make that more clear.
It will not affect the mass in any way whatsoever.
Yes due to something called 'specific heat capacity', this is basically that the more water there is, the hotter it can get.
One of the factors that affect mass communication is poor infrastructure. Lack of knowledge and poverty also affect mass communication in Tanzania.
something to occupy but not mass is solid
No because mass doesn't means how it affect far it rolls
No, the mass of an object does not affect the speed at which it falls to Earth. All objects fall at the same rate of acceleration due to gravity, regardless of their mass. This principle is known as the equivalence principle.
No.
The greater the mass, the stronger the gravity, but the distance does not affect the amount of gravity.
No, mass remains constant.
no and mass is air