Perhaps the stick is not of equal thickness along its length.
Perhaps the stick is not of equal thickness along its length.
There may be additional length on either side. Or the mass may be distributed unevenly. Or there may be a steep gravity gradient, so that the center of mass is not the center of gravity (don't bet on it, though).
9.8
no it is same
Pycnometer, Digital density meter
Perhaps the stick is not of equal thickness along its length.
There may be additional length on either side. Or the mass may be distributed unevenly. Or there may be a steep gravity gradient, so that the center of mass is not the center of gravity (don't bet on it, though).
Yes, one hundred centimeters are exactly one meter.
Exactly 100 cenitimaters are in 1 meter.
In other you mean, and yes. There is gravity every nano meter of the whole universe, nothing is away from gravity, gravity is everywhere.
A meter is more than a center meter so technically it's impossible to add meters together to get a center meter. That being said, there are 100cm in a meter.
There is no unit of "gravity". Gravity is described in terms of its effects, namely acceleration and force. SI unit of force: [ newton ] = 1 kilogram-meter/second2 SI unit of acceleration: meter/second2
9.8
It is a length of exactly 10 metres.
A classroom 'meter stick' is exactly that size.
Approximately 8.87 meter/second2. For comparison, Earth's gravity is approximately 9.82 meters/second2.
There is exactly 100 cm in a meter. (m)