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The large mass can have proportionately more force applied to it than to the smaller mass.
False. The momentum of an object is given by the mass times the velocity of the object. Hence, a low-mass object must have a large velocity to have a large momentum.
That would depend on what you consider "large".The size of an object's momentum = (its mass) x (its speed).So, more mass and more speed result in more momentum.
Yes. The mass per unit volume defines the (mass) density. Size doesn't change the calculated density.
Small force on small mass :When we exhale the air the force of exhaled air is less. Tiny particles of less masses are present in the nearer air and they start moving with large velocity. On Large mass : it's well explained in pascal's law. From that we can apply small force on larger mass .
-- a hot-air balloon -- St. Patrick's Cathedral on a snowy day
The large mass can have proportionately more force applied to it than to the smaller mass.
Usually small metals (e.g magnesium etc) have small capacit but large mass Hope it helps :)
Because it is lighter.
well something with large capacity and small mass is a ballon but I cant think of anything that would be the opposite.... My math assignment told me to figure out something with large mass and small capacity but its just too hard.... hope you find a answer and post it when u do!!!
False. The momentum of an object is given by the mass times the velocity of the object. Hence, a low-mass object must have a large velocity to have a large momentum.
A hydrogen balloon, or for safety's sake, a helium balloon.
It is not! According to Newton's law the exact opposite is true.
The density of an object is directly correlated with the amount of mass contained in the object. For example, a small object containing a large amount of mass has more density than a larger object with a smaller amount of mass.
Amount can be a value in money terms, or the mass of an object. Neither is a capacity.Amount can be a value in money terms, or the mass of an object. Neither is a capacity.Amount can be a value in money terms, or the mass of an object. Neither is a capacity.Amount can be a value in money terms, or the mass of an object. Neither is a capacity.
I do not know the answer.The difference between mass and capacity is that capacity is how much something can hold and mass is the weight of an object.
Large mass