If you were weighing the clothes on the Moon where there is no air -
Then if you had the clothes in an airtight case that has bee sealed when you packed the clothes on Earth before you took them to the Moon to weigh -
The the sealed case would weigh more than it would do once you had opened it on the Moon (and all the air had escaped) and re-weighed it.
Thus the answer is Yes - because air has mass and therefore weighs something.
Clothes + air weigh more than "airless" clothes.
Yes
all you do is press d! (but don't wear any clothes!)
No, they do not because I have tried it. by:Richard_90
Take all clothes off and ONLY hold the guitar press dance
They don't. The mass of the clothes doesn't differ whether they're in a zipped bag, a box or nothing at all. The mass of the container decides the weight.
No. The molar mass of dry air is 28.97 g/mol. Noble gases are monatomic, so their atomic mass represent their molar mass. From this we can tell that helium and neon are less dense (lighter) than air, while argon (atomic mass 39.9) onwards are denser than air.
Take all your clothes and items off except your shovel and press the d key.
You buy your food in the grocery store, but you cant actaull buy clothes. Your sim owns all the clothes. All you have to do is go to your wardrobe (drawer) and press plan outfit, and you can change your sims style
Some are heavier, but some are lighter. For example, methane rises but propane sinks.
Dirigibles are lighter-than-air aircraft that can be maneuvered by their own power. There are different kinds of dirigibles, such as blimps and airships, but all are distinguished from other lighter-than-air craft, such as balloons, which do not have their own steering and power sources.
The composition of Earth's atmosphere is mostly nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and oxygen. All of these elements are denser than helium, and therefore it tends to rise.
Almost all of the first aircraft engines were air cooled as this made for a lighter engine.