Becaude it has more mass
Not necessarily. Weight is the force of gravity acting on an object, so it depends on the mass of the object. A larger object may weigh more than a smaller object if it has more mass, but size alone does not determine weight.
You have the same mass anywhere, but you weigh more or less on a planet depending on the gravitaional pull of the planet. The more gravitational pull, the more you weigh. The gravitational pull depends on the size of the planet. The bigger the planet, the more gravitaional pull.
Any object weighs more on the moon than it does on an asteroid or comet, but less than it weighs on earth ... only about 16% of its earthly weight.
No, an object that weighs 40 N on Earth would weigh less than 40 N on the Moon. The Moon's gravitational pull is about 1/6th that of Earth's, so the object's weight would be significantly reduced. Specifically, it would weigh approximately 6.6 N on the Moon.
An object would weigh less on the moon compared to Earth because the moon has less gravitational pull than Earth. Weight is a measure of the gravitational force acting on an object, so with less gravitational pull on the moon, the object would weigh less.
jupiter is the planet which makes the object's weigh more
volume is how much space is in an object (an object with more volume would be bigger) weight is how heavy an object feels due to gravity (an object with more weight would be harder to lift) density is how much matter is in an amount of space (an object with more density would weigh as much as an object with less density but in a smaller space/volume)
It depends on the size of the breast. If your breast is bigger then its going to weigh more
no
wow what a question!! well i don't know but hot air rises so cold would probably weigh more..
Not necessarily. Weight is the force of gravity acting on an object, so it depends on the mass of the object. A larger object may weigh more than a smaller object if it has more mass, but size alone does not determine weight.
You have the same mass anywhere, but you weigh more or less on a planet depending on the gravitaional pull of the planet. The more gravitational pull, the more you weigh. The gravitational pull depends on the size of the planet. The bigger the planet, the more gravitaional pull.
Just about any object you care to name. If you make something bigger or smaller, you can usually make it weigh exactly 1 kiogram.
If you put your object further backwards your shadow will become bigger but if you put your object more forwards your shadow will become smaller!
No. Any object on the moon would weigh about a sixth of what it does on Earth.
Certainly - the bigger your breasts the more you weigh and hence the bigger your BMI.
Objects with more mass weigh more because weight is directly proportional to mass. The gravitational force acting on an object is stronger when the object has more mass, resulting in a greater weight measurement.