the moon
On both it has the same amount of gravity but it has a different amount of force. The elephant might weighmore than the cat but they both have the exact same amount of gravity, or as others say it, acceleration. So the answer would be that it pull down on both of them with an equal amount of force.
Weight is mass*gravity, in zero gravity objects have zero weight. But they still have mass! When one object bumps another they under go a collision. Which can be explained by transfer of energy or conservation of momentum. In the case of energy, KE=1/2mv2 the mouse and the elephant have different masses so therefore different kinetic energy. Or in terms of momentum (mass*velocity), again the mouse and elephant have different masses and therefore different momentums at the time of impact. Therefore the reaction you feel will be different.
No.
i think yes .. i heard like this info
No, the gravitational force experienced by an object is determined by its mass and the mass of the Earth, not its size. Both an elephant and a mouse feel the same gravitational pull towards the Earth.
Mass and weight are two different things. Mass does not change, but weight changes depending on the gravity acting on the item. An elephant has the same mass on Earth, the Moon, or when weightless in orbit. The weights in each of those location will vary greatly.
because they are fat.
about the same weight
Both the elephant and the mouse would hit the ground at the same time. In a vacuum or free fall scenario, objects of different masses fall at the same rate due to gravity (ignoring air resistance). This principle was famously demonstrated by Galileo in the 16th century.
The elephant walking at 3 meters per second east has more momentum because momentum is defined as mass multiplied by velocity, and the elephant has much more mass than the mouse. The higher velocity of the elephant further contributes to its greater momentum compared to the mouse.
The average weight for a male elephant (bulls) is 4.4 tonnes. The weight of the female elephant (cows) is 4.1 tonnes. A new-born baby elephant weighs about 125 kgs or the same weight as 3 ten year old children.
No, assuming the mouse and elephant hit you at the same speed. The elephant has a much greater mass, so a greater force is required to accelerate it. Think of the difference between a baseball hitting you at 50 mph and a car hitting you at 50 mph. The lack of a large gravity well nearby does not waive Newton's laws of motion.