Mass is a measure of the amount of stuff of which a person or a thing is made.
There's no reason the environment should have any effect on that amount. The
object's mass doesn't change, whether it's in air, vacuum, maple syrup, or water,
unless or until a piece falls off.
Nothing
nothing.
An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.
The mass remains the same.
No mass is not the magnitude of the force due to gravity on an object. Mass is the stuff of which the object is composed. The magnitude of the gravitational forces between the object and Earth ... or whatever planet the object happens to be on ... is the object's "weight".
Nothing
nothing.
If the mass of an object increases, what happens to the acceleration?
The acceleration of the object increases.
If the mass of an object remains constant, and the amount of space underwater it takes up (it displacement) increases, the buoyant force on the object will increase. The object will rise until it regains equilibrium, when it displaces the same mass of water as its own mass.
An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.
Acceleration is a net force that is inversely dependent on mass, therefore if an object's mass decreases, acceleration increases.
The mass remains the same.
No mass is not the magnitude of the force due to gravity on an object. Mass is the stuff of which the object is composed. The magnitude of the gravitational forces between the object and Earth ... or whatever planet the object happens to be on ... is the object's "weight".
To find the mass of an object based on the displaced water, you can make use of Archimedes' principle. Measure the volume of the water displaced by the object, and then multiply it by the density of water (usually 1 g/mL). This will give you the mass of the object.
floating
it decreases