yes
i don'know
Mass can never be created nor destroyed, so it is "conserved." Even when mass seems to disappear, it never really does; for example, when you burn wood, it turns into ash and gasses like carbon dioxide -- all the atoms of the wood still exist, they've just been rearranged into new states.
the total mass will be equal to the mass of the tea added to the mass of the sugar such is the law of conservation of mass. The weight will be proportional and dependent on the gravity force of the position in space
mass is conserved (total mass is the sum of the mass of the constituents) so 50 + 50 = 100g
Yes. The mass is preserved in a chemical reaction. In other words, the tea will weigh more when sugar is added to it, and the final mass will be exactly as much as the mass of the tea without sugar plus the mass of the sugar alone.
Mass is conserved. It is a law of nature.
Its not the same, vato.
Yes. Basically, mass is always conserved.Yes. Basically, mass is always conserved.Yes. Basically, mass is always conserved.Yes. Basically, mass is always conserved.
In a chemical reaction, the total mass and the number of atoms of each element are always conserved. This is known as the law of conservation of mass.
Both mass and charge
A mass noun can be used without markers, for example:I'll have tea. Tea is better than coffee.This needs sugar. Sugar will perk it up.Rice will be good with this recipe. My mom made this with rice.A mass noun can be used with markers, for example:The tea is bitter.The sugar is gone.The rice boiled over.Since mass nouns, like tea, rice, and sugar are expressed as in terms of measure or form, the noun markers are used for the measure; for example:The pot of tea...A cup of sugar...An ounce of rice...The bottle of oxygen...A roll of aluminum...An ocean of water...Plural forms for some substance nouns are reserved for 'kinds of' or 'types of'; noun markers are used in the same way:The combination of sugars...A selection of rices...An assortment of teas...
Mass and energy