Weight is a measure of gravity's pull against some object. No a brick will not weigh the same on earth as in space or on the moon. It will, however, have the same mass.
also weight and mass IS DIFFERENT weight is a measure of gravity pull against objects mass basicly mean how many atoms
Yes, a gallon of water has the same mass in space as it does on Earth. However, because weight is a force dependent on gravity, the weight of the water would be different in space compared to on Earth due to the difference in gravitational pull.
No, humans weigh less on the Moon than on Earth because the Moon has less gravity. The gravitational force on the Moon is about 1/6th of the gravitational force on Earth, so a person would weigh less on the Moon compared to Earth.
The gravity is less on the Moon, because the Moon is smaller than earth; it has less mass, and therefore "sucks" less than the earth. Weight is gravity times mass, you have the same mass on Earth and on the Moon (and in space), but weigh less on the moon.
No, your weight on the Moon would be about one sixth of your weight on Earth due to the lower gravity on the Moon. This means that if you weighed 150 pounds on Earth, you would weigh around 25 pounds on the Moon.
No. An object on Mars would weigh about 38% of what it does on Earth. The _mass_ would be the same, however, so you would be able to lift it easier, but pushing it and stopping it would be the same as on Earth.
The answer is they all weigh the same amount are equal in weight which is different then density
They weigh the same.
Yes, a gallon of water has the same mass in space as it does on Earth. However, because weight is a force dependent on gravity, the weight of the water would be different in space compared to on Earth due to the difference in gravitational pull.
Nothing - there is no force acting on it - it's mass stays the same and would be what it is on earth
No. On Mercury you would weigh 37% of what you weigh on Earth.
A brick made of lead would weigh more than a brick made of iron of the same size. This is because lead is denser than iron, meaning it has more mass packed into a similar volume.
No. You would would weigh only about 38% of your weight on Earth.
They both weigh the same, a ton! ;-)
The same amount as 510mg of brick. 510mg.
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, like, a brick made of lead would weigh more than a brick made of iron because lead is denser than iron. It's all about those atomic weights and stuff, you know? So, if you're looking to impress your friends with some random trivia, there you go!
earth and neptune
no, we do not weigh the same at the poles because as the earth is not perfectly round and is like an orange, the distance between the object and the earth's core is less due to which we weigh more on poles