well it all dependes on the amount of apples in the bag and the mass of the bag and each apple. If u ask me it is a bit of a stupid question ! x
An apple sack is a bag full of apples
The mass of a 2 kg bag of apples remains 2 kg regardless of location, including on the moor. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object and does not change with gravitational force or location. However, the weight of the bag would vary slightly depending on the gravitational pull of the specific location.
There are six times as many apples in the bag on the Moon. This is usually used by the metric folks to point out that the pound is really a measure of Force, while the kilogram is a measure of Mass. (If the question had been 1 kg of apples on each, the answer would have been that they have the same number of apples).
That depends what quantity you want to measure. -- Weight of the bag of apples . . . the scale in the store, newtons or pounds -- Mass of the bag of apples . . . . . balance scale, kilograms -- Length, width, or height of the bag . . . ruler, inches or centimeters -- Volume of the bag of apples . . . tub of water, graduated cylinder, liters or fluid ounces -- Time the apples stay fresh . . . calendar, clock, hours or days
It would usually be 2kg.
Yes. Of course! No, because some of the stems might have fallen off.
Martin picked a bag full of apples to take to his teammates.
kg
1/6
The mass of a 2 kg bag of apples remains 2 kg on the Moon, as mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object and does not change based on location. However, the weight of the bag would be less on the Moon due to its weaker gravitational pull, approximately 1/6th that of Earth's. Therefore, while the mass is constant, the weight would be about 3.2 newtons on the Moon.
Edith's Shopping Bag was created in 1976.
If it weighs one kilogram on the moon, it will have about six times as many apples as a bag of 1 kilo apples on earth.