When it's filled with air(after its fully open), ofcourse
Answerer - Guest T
Most of the mass in an atom is in the nucleus. The protons and neutrons are about the same weight, 1 amu. The elecrtons are 1/1840 of the mass of an proton. Neutrons are 2000 times heavier than electrons and protons have an equal mass of neutrons
Mass wasting
The nucleus, made up of protons and neutrons, contains most of an atom's mass.
Atomic mass is based on the proton and neutron. For the most part the mass of an electron is infinitesimally small.
KZdsdd
In PowerPoint, if you press the escape key during a slide show It will stop the slide show.
slide your mouse strait across the word escape
The greater the mass of the planet, the greater will be the escape velocity.
The mass of a glass microscope slide typically ranges from 1 to 2 grams, depending on the specific dimensions and thickness of the slide.
A small area of immense mass in space from which nothing can escape is called a black hole. Black holes are the most mysterious and the strangest objects in the sky.
The escape velocity of a particle of mass m is independent of the mass of the particle. It is solely dependent on the mass and radius of the object it is trying to escape from. The escape velocity is given by the formula: (v = \sqrt{\frac{2GM}{r}}), where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the object, and r is the distance from the center of the object to the particle.
MythBusters - 2003 Escape Slide Parachute 3-15 was released on: USA: 10 August 2005 Finland: 28 March 2007
no
I assume you are asking how to arm the Emergency Escape Slide in a passenger airliner? After you close the door, there is usually a lever that you pull to activate the arming mechanism for the Escape Slide. The Airbus has a lever on the door. Others have it above the door.
a volcano will erupt forcing its magma to escape.
No, its depends on the planets gravitational pull
The escape velocity of an object only depends on the mass of the planet it is escaping from, not the mass of the object itself. Therefore, Starship B would also require a speed of about 11 km/s to escape from Earth.