Continental Polar
maritime tropical
cold or wind
The greater the mass, the greater the force of gravity.
Temperature has no effect on molar mass
no the mass of the object would not even be able to calculate the measurment of density
If Earth didn't move, airmasses would float in straight lines. However, since Earth does in fact move, it causes air masses to arc.
Mass doesn't change. Mass the is substance of an object, moving it around won't affect how much mass it has, only adding or subtracting from the object would affect the quantity of mass. The weight would change because gravity is inversely proportional to distance but not the mass.
The productive capacity of the soils people use is likely to be affected by mass movement erosion.
An air mass originating over north central Canada would most likely be cold and dry.
to affect a science activity you can drop it and it would lower the mass
Well it would be a milligram.
Yes. And if massive enough then the density may increase due to gravitational attraction in a matter of time we can perceive. even with a small mass this is happening, however it may take 1000s to millions of years for it to be measurable.In most cases the mass would remain the same (absent radioactivity losses) but the density would increase. If highly radioactive its mass would likely decrease over time.