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Due to their small size, you would use millimeters to measure the length of an ant.
Crocodiles, I would imagine.
Newton's Second Law: force = mass x acceleration. Solving for acceleration: acceleration = force / mass. In other words, other things (i.e., the mass) being equal, the acceleration is proportional to the force.
Depending on the size of the fossil, anything from a micrometre to a metre.
Newtons or Pounds... Newtons is more common.
To measure the size of a force you could use a joule, as it's a newton meter (ba-dump ching!). Assuming this was a serious question and not a setup for the newton meter joke, forces are generally measured using a spring scale.
Meters are closer to what you would measure an animal of that size with.
Just try it on and whatever size fits, or you can do it the hard way and measure your waist with a tape measure and go measure their selection of jeans.
Yes
It depends on what you want to measure. Their mass or size?
It depends on what you mean by size: its length, volume, surface area or even its mass.
Full of large size. But if you measure their legs then measure the boots in the shop it will help.
The magnitude of a buoyant force on a balloon depends on the size of the balloon. In other words, the force will be either big or small depending on the correlating size of the balloon in use with the experiment.
it depends on the size of the noodle and I would suggest inches
you would think it is feet but, it is inches
The Earth and you are attracted to the centers of each other by a pair of equal gravitational forces. The size of the force attracting you toward the center of the Earth is your "weight" on Earth. The size of the force attracting the Earth toward the center of you is the Earth's "weight" on you. They are equal.