If the force is gravity, the answer is yes. Gravity "pulls" on an object in proportion to its mass. A heavier (more massive) object is pulled on by gravity more than a lighter (less massive) object. A football tackle is pulled on by gravity more than the average grade school student.
less on Mercury compared to Earth. This is due to the weaker gravitational pull of Mercury, which is only about 38% of the gravity on Earth. As a result, objects weigh less on Mercury because there is less force pulling them towards the planet's surface.
If the MASS of the 1st Object in a COLLISION is too small to generate a FORCE large enough to overcome the INERTIA of the 2nd Object, then the more massive Object will not move. This could make it look like the more massive object is not REACTING to the Collision.
no
wow what a question!! well i don't know but hot air rises so cold would probably weigh more..
9.7% less than you weigh on Earth, 138% more than you weigh on Mars.
It weighs more on the earth. The moon is much less massive than earth, so it attracts objects with a smaller force.
It weighs more on the earth. The moon is much less massive than earth, so it attracts objects with a smaller force.
True. An object in motion tends to stay in motion, and an object at rest tends to stay at rest.
If you apply the same force to a less massive object, it will experience a greater acceleration compared to a more massive object. This is because acceleration is inversely proportional to mass when force is constant (Newton's second law of motion, F=ma).
Yes, the more massive object will exert a greater force of gravity on another object compared to a less massive one, as gravitational force is directly proportional to the product of the masses of the two objects involved.
For example, if you push a canoe for 10 seconds with a certain force, and if you push an ocean liner for 10 seconds with the same force, the canoe will be moving faster, because it has less mass.
The mass will definitely weigh less as the moon is less massive than the Earth and hence the Gravity of the Moon will be lesser than Earth. The object's weight will be 1/6 times that on Earth.
An object would weigh less on the moon compared to Earth because the moon has less gravitational pull than Earth. Weight is a measure of the gravitational force acting on an object, so with less gravitational pull on the moon, the object would weigh less.
less on Mercury compared to Earth. This is due to the weaker gravitational pull of Mercury, which is only about 38% of the gravity on Earth. As a result, objects weigh less on Mercury because there is less force pulling them towards the planet's surface.
Not necessarily. Weight is the force of gravity acting on an object, so it depends on the mass of the object. A larger object may weigh more than a smaller object if it has more mass, but size alone does not determine weight.
If the MASS of the 1st Object in a COLLISION is too small to generate a FORCE large enough to overcome the INERTIA of the 2nd Object, then the more massive Object will not move. This could make it look like the more massive object is not REACTING to the Collision.
Objects with more mass weigh more because weight is directly proportional to mass. The gravitational force acting on an object is stronger when the object has more mass, resulting in a greater weight measurement.