Mass and weight are not the same; mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, typically measured in kilograms or grams, and remains constant regardless of location. Weight, on the other hand, is the force exerted by gravity on that mass and can vary depending on the gravitational pull of the location, typically measured in newtons or pounds. In essence, mass is an intrinsic property, while weight is dependent on external factors such as gravity.
Do all rocks weigh the same if they have a different mass but the same weight? Let's look at the question without one bit of it..... "Do all rocks weigh the same if they have ......... .... ... the same weight?" If things are the same weight, then they weigh the same.
Mass takes up space, so it will take up the same amount no matter where you are. Weight is dependent on the force of gravity pushing you to the ground. With different forces of gravity on each planet your weight will differ.
No, your mass does not change from planet to planet; it remains constant regardless of location. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, while weight is the force exerted by gravity on that mass. Since different planets have different gravitational forces, your weight will vary depending on the planet, but your mass will stay the same.
Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, weight is the force exerted on an object due to gravity, and force is a push or pull on an object. In the context of Earth's gravity, an object's weight is directly proportional to its mass, because weight is the force resulting from the gravitational pull on an object's mass.
The weight of an object remains the same regardless of its location, but its mass would be different due to the different gravitational forces on Jupiter and the Moon. On Jupiter, the mass would be about 7.49 times greater than on Earth, and on the Moon, it would be about 1/6th of the mass on Earth.
Mass and weight are different notions in a correct physics terminology.
Who found (discovered) that objects of different mass and weight fall at the same rate
Do all rocks weigh the same if they have a different mass but the same weight? Let's look at the question without one bit of it..... "Do all rocks weigh the same if they have ......... .... ... the same weight?" If things are the same weight, then they weigh the same.
Yes, but the weight of that mass will be different.
The answer is weight.
Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, while weight is the force of gravity acting on an object's mass. Mass remains constant regardless of location, while weight can change depending on the strength of gravity.
The atomic weight is taken as the average weight or mass of the different isotopes of the Same atom That exists in the different %age in our enviromenT
an objects mass is always the same but the weight can change because on different planets, the gravitational pull is different. so, yes
False
The mass on the moon and the earth is the same but the weight changes.
isotopes always have the same? mass # & atomic #, or atomic # and atomic weight, or atomic # but different mass #'s
False