mass (:
No. Weight is a measure of the pull of gravity on the object, while mass is the amount of matter. An object always has mass, but does not necessarily have a weight.
mass is how much matter is in an object and weight is the gravitational pull on an object mass x gravity = weight
the gravitational pull makes the object fall quicker. it doesn't matter about weith
Yes, mass is the amount of matter in an object.
true
mass (:
No. Weight is a measure of the pull of gravity on the object, while mass is the amount of matter. An object always has mass, but does not necessarily have a weight.
mass is how much matter is in an object and weight is the gravitational pull on an object mass x gravity = weight
the gravitational pull makes the object fall quicker. it doesn't matter about weith
Yes, mass is the amount of matter in an object.
The weight on an object is the gravitaional pull.
An object's gravitational pull is determined by the object's mass.
This would be an object's mass, which is related to the total number of molecules in the object. When considered in conjunction with gravitational pull, you are measuring the weight of an object (which in physics term is a force rather than a static measure).
This would be an object's mass, which is related to the total number of molecules in the object. When considered in conjunction with gravitational pull, you are measuring the weight of an object (which in physics term is a force rather than a static measure).
mass is the amount of matter in an object. mass remains unaffected by gravity. weight is a measure of a gravitational pull on n object and is there for affected by gravity.
In physics, a push or pull on an object is called a force.