At the same distance, objects with more mass will have a greater gravitational attraction.
If by "better" you mean "stronger", the greater masses will cause a stronger gravitational force.
Mass takes up space. Say, 50 square cu. ft. of feathers has more mass than 25 square cu. ft. of bricks. Weight is the gravitational pull on an object. Because bricks weigh more than feathers, bricks would have a srong gravitational pull. Mass takes up space, and weight is how strong an object's gravitational pull is.
This question has been answered to death on this website! To cut a long story short... Given that a ton of feathers and a ton of bricks are of equal mass, but differing volume (the feathers are much less dense, and thus more volumous):Assuming they are measured at the same location on Earth, the ton of feathers would displace more air (a fluid), creating greater upthrust, thus causing them to weigh less.So, a ton of bricks is heavier than a ton of feathers. (on Earth)
Depends on how heavy the feathers are
Feathers are solid.
If by "better" you mean "stronger", the greater masses will cause a stronger gravitational force.
I'm assuming you published this question just to get a kick out of it, because cats DON'T grow feathers. They grow FUR not feathers.
Something that weighs a ton is equal to other things that weigh a ton, therefore a ton of anything is equal to a ton of anything else. Even if it's feathers versus lead or cotton versus cement.
Wheat ears, not feathers Cent, not penny Assuming 1936, please see the Related Question for more information.
Kiwi have shaggy feathers which, from a distance, resemble hair more than feathers. They have been described as resembling ostrich feathers, but which feel like the mane or tail of a horse. Their feathers are densely packed, about 2.5cm thick, to keep them warm and dry.
Mass takes up space. Say, 50 square cu. ft. of feathers has more mass than 25 square cu. ft. of bricks. Weight is the gravitational pull on an object. Because bricks weigh more than feathers, bricks would have a srong gravitational pull. Mass takes up space, and weight is how strong an object's gravitational pull is.
Ten pounds of anything is exactly the same weight as ten pounds of anything else.
Some would say peacocks only have 1 feather, they would be wrong! A peacock can hold up to 30 small feathers or 4 HUGE ones but 20 medium or average size feathers. The way peacocks spread they're tail/feathers it can look like just a single feather. But for I have came into a very close distance with these exotic creatures and have seen the truth. Peacock costumes make it seem like 1 feather but costumes don't always hold the truth. I truly hope you come into a distance with these creatures for they will be quite the site of your life!
Contour feathers are on the wings and tail.
Countour feathers and down feathers
no they have spikes and they have to nail. But no feathers. they are no such things as feathers
contour feathers,flight feathers,primary feathers and secondary feathers