Speed does not increase the weight of a moving body. Weight is determined by the mass of the object and the force of gravity acting on it, and it remains constant regardless of speed. Speed only affects the kinetic energy of the body, which is proportional to the square of the speed.
Mass and velocity (weight and speed)
Mass has no effect on torque. Torque is the product of distance (from the axis), force, and an angular function. Mass can, however, make the turbine more stable - it will take longer to react to variations in wind. More mass will increase the MOMENT OF INERTIA (rotational inertia).
You must calculate using the speed of gravity as instantaneous otherwise a balanced moving mass system is no longer balanced and is out of alignment.
Yes, because it has mass. KE = 1/2mv2, where m is mass in kg and v is velocity in m/s.
The speed of the bike has no effect on its weight. Weight = mass in kg x acceleration due to gravity, 9.8m/s2 on the earth.
-- Force has no effect on mass.-- "Weight" is force.
Inertia & weight.
weight is the effect of gravity acting on mass,the greater the mass the greater the effect on gravity will have on it therefore the greater the weight. eg. if the mass is 50kg and gravity is 10N the the weight is 500N,if the mass increases to 100kg the the weight would increase to 1000N
weight is the effect of gravity acting on mass,the greater the mass the greater the effect on gravity will have on it therefore the greater the weight. eg. if the mass is 50kg and gravity is 10N the the weight is 500N,if the mass increases to 100kg the the weight would increase to 1000N
Weight.
mass
The Weight Change.
Absolutely not! Any body has the same mass anywhere. The weight of a body is the effect of gravity on the mass.
No, The weight is depends on gravity and total mass .
It could be Newton who discovered that weight was the effect of gravity acting on a mass.
Weight difference or changing