It is a physical change.
No, the moment of inertia of an object does not change with a change in its center of mass. The moment of inertia depends on the mass distribution and shape of an object, not its center of mass.
The amount of energy needed to change a given mass of ice to water at constant temperature is called the heat of fusion. This is the heat energy required to change a solid to a liquid at its melting point.
The atomic mass of an atom can be changed by adding or removing subatomic particles. By adding or removing protons, neutrons, or electrons, the atomic mass will be altered. Changing the number of protons will change the element, while changing the number of neutrons will create isotopes of the same element.
no it doesnt gain mass at allIt can change the bio mass. But cannot change the mass of earth as it uses resources within earth
It is called the Law of Conservation in Mass.!
its is a previous particle
"Matter"
Mass.
The energy per unit mass required to complete a phase change is called the latent heat. It represents the energy needed to change the state of a substance without changing its temperature.
That is called the specific heat.
Mass does not change with temperature
In this case mass doesn't change.
The inertia. This is directly related to the object's mass.
Inertia.
The mass will hardly change. What changes is the weight.The mass will hardly change. What changes is the weight.The mass will hardly change. What changes is the weight.The mass will hardly change. What changes is the weight.
Change in mass -------------------- Change of water That is change in mass divided by change of water
Mass is the measure of inertia and if you change the mass the inertia will change.