No.
It is important to realize that they are different. Many physical properties depend on this distinction. The mass of a sponge may be small but it has a gigantic area.
This is a doubt....by Niranjanrbharati (DP stands for Directly proportional)
Presssure=thrust/area
=>P x A =T
=>T (DP)A
As Thrust is Force
Thrust=Mass x g
A (DP) m x g
A(DP)m
If the calculation is right isnt mass Directly prop. to Area?????
(edit the answer below)
Acceleration is directly proportional to the net force. Net force is equal to the mass times acceleration, taking this into consideration we can clearly see that acceleration is inversely proportional to mass.By Armah Ishmael Ryesa
Force is directly proportional to the mass of the object which in turn depends on the density and volume of the object.It also matters whether the body is aldready at motion or not.
No
Newton's second law, which states that the acceleration of a body is directly proportional to the net force and inversely proportional to its mass, a = F/m.
Density is mass divided by volume.
Mass and density are directly proportional because density is defined as the mass of an object divided by its volume. As mass increases, but volume remains constant, the density of the object also increases. Similarly, if mass decreases, density will decrease as well.
Density is defined as mass divided by volume. This means that density is directly proportional to mass and inversely proportional to volume. As mass increases, density also increases, while as volume increases, density decreases.
No, density is not directly proportional to volume. Density is defined as mass per unit volume, so it is determined by both mass and volume. Two objects with the same volume can have different densities if they have different masses.
Of course yes! Just think of the formula for density! Density=mass/volume! There is a direct relationship between density and mass (directly proportional)!
Density is the measure of mass per unit volume of a substance. It is calculated by dividing the mass of an object by its volume. Therefore, the relationship between density, mass, and volume is that density is directly proportional to mass and inversely proportional to volume.
Mass is directly proportional to density. This means that as the density of a substance increases, its mass also increases, assuming the volume remains constant.density = mass/volume, so if volume is constant then a larger mass means a larger density.
Greater the mass higher the density and less the mass lower the density as D = M/V For fixed V, density is directly proportional to the mass.
Density is determined by the mass of a substance divided by its volume. Therefore, both mass and volume do affect the density of a substance. If the mass increases without a corresponding increase in volume, the density will increase. Conversely, if the volume increases without a corresponding increase in mass, the density will decrease.
Force is directly proportional to mass provided the acceleration is constant.
Example of inverse proportion is: Density = Mass/Volume Because the formula represents that the density is directly proportional to the mass while density is inversely proportional to volume. Remember that inversely proportional means that if variable A increases, the variable B decreases, and if variable B increases, the variable A decreases.
The same 2 to 3 because the mass is directly proportional to the volume. Recall the relationship Mass = volume x density. Here density remains constant
As the mass of a substance increases while its volume stays constant, its density will also increase. Conversely, if the mass of the substance stays constant while its volume increases, the density will decrease. This is because density is directly proportional to mass and inversely proportional to volume.