Gravity . . . pulling you down.
The scale . . . pushing you up.
If these two forces were not equal, then there would be a net force on the bottom
of your feet, either upward or downward, and you would be accelerating.
The force that is pulling you down when you stand on a set of bathroom scales is gravity. This force is pulling you towards the center of the Earth, causing your weight to be measured on the scales.
Gravity
Newer scales like digital and spring scales, measure the force your body exerts on the pad you're standing on, which is your weight. The scale then divides your weight by gravity to give you your mass.
The bathroom scale measures the force exerted by your body due to gravity, which is the force exerted by the Earth pulling you towards its center. This force is represented as your weight.
When you stand on tiptoes on a bathroom scale, there is an increase in the reading on the scale. This happens because you are effectively pushing down harder on the scale when standing on your tiptoes, increasing the force it measures.
The bathroom scale displays the force that Earth's gravity is exerting on you, which is your weight. This force is the product of your mass and the acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s^2).
The reaction force to gravity is the ground pushing back up against you with an equal force to support your weight. This is known as the normal force.
stand on them
Newer scales like digital and spring scales, measure the force your body exerts on the pad you're standing on, which is your weight. The scale then divides your weight by gravity to give you your mass.
get the scales from your bathroom stand on them with the lamb in your arms
each equal your weight
Gravitational force is the force of attraction between two objects with mass. It is a fundamental force of physics that causes objects to accelerate towards each other. The strength of the gravitational force is determined by the masses of the objects and the distance between them.
The force.
When you stand on tiptoes on a bathroom scale, there is an increase in the reading on the scale. This happens because you are effectively pushing down harder on the scale when standing on your tiptoes, increasing the force it measures.
The bathroom scale displays the force that Earth's gravity is exerting on you, which is your weight. This force is the product of your mass and the acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s^2).
It would be the same as if one tug of war team was pulling against a tree.
The support force of your scale is the same as your weight, but in an upward direction. If that were not so, the scale would be deformed (dented in) under your weight.
The support force of your scale is the same as your weight, but in an upward direction. If that were not so, the scale would be deformed (dented in) under your weight.
Kelvin