bloating. gasses building in order to get to the rotting.
Yes, after death, the body may lose weight due to processes such as loss of fluids through excretion, evaporation, and tissue breakdown. However, the extent of weight loss can vary depending on factors like temperature, body composition, and postmortem interval.
Excessive calorie intake is converted into fat - which increases body weight.
the same
Type your answer here... Because during growth mass of the body increases and that is directly proportional to weight weight= mgl where m= Mass, g=acceleration due to gravity and l=length
Your ears
Your body starts to retain water and you bloat. Hence the term "water weight"
Yes - the hevier the weight the greater the demand on muscles.
The weight exceeds the force of air resistance, but as the speed increases the air resistance increases, so the net force (weight - air resistance) falls. When the difference becomes zero the acceleration ceases and you have terminal velocity.
hunger increases and the metabolic rate goes down
absorb the body fluid and new environment.
upthrust=buoyant force=weight of the body immersed in d liquid so gravity and mass is a cause of upthrust as weight of a body=mass* gravity
If your mass increases, your weight also increases.