Weight. Mass is independent of gravity.
The amount of force exerted is the same no matter what type of measurement system is used.
The force with which gravity pulls on a quantity of matter is referred to as gravity.
If your mass for example is 10 kg then your weight is 98 newton as the weight=mass *gravity ; weight=mass*9.8 , other example if you went to the moon your mass won`t change but your weight will as gravity changed.
units of acceleration
weightthe ammount of force appliedweight
The units of the force of gravity, or any force for that matter, are Newtons.
Mass is the amount of matter in the object. Weight measurement of force that gravity is exerting on the object.
Which term describes how much space a substance occupies? volume Not sure how that question relates to the one initially asked, but the answer to 'How is measurement of weight different from measurement of mass?' is weight includes the force of gravity. Weight Includes The Force Of Gravity (A+)Weight is the measurement of the force of gravity in relation to mass, while mass is the measurement of matter in an object.
The amount of force exerted is the same no matter what type of measurement system is used.
Gravity is NOT matter, it is a force that effects matter.
WEIGHT
The acceleration and force of gravity are vectors.
The force with which gravity pulls on a quantity of matter is referred to as gravity.
units of acceleration
No. Gravity is a force, not a form of matter.
If your mass for example is 10 kg then your weight is 98 newton as the weight=mass *gravity ; weight=mass*9.8 , other example if you went to the moon your mass won`t change but your weight will as gravity changed.
The answer depends on measurement of WHAT! Their radii, volume, mass, force of gravity acting between them, period of orbit are some possible measurements.