In vacuum, yes. Otherwise the object with a lower density will fall more slowly.
Volume. Density depends on mass and volume. Density = mass/volume. Things that have the exact same mass can have different densities if the volume associated with either are different.
Two objects can have different volumes but the same density if they are made of different materials. Density is a measure of how much mass is packed into a certain volume, so objects with different volumes can still have the same density if their masses are adjusted accordingly.
Objects have different mass because they not weighted the same..
will have a higher density. Density is the mass of an object per unit volume, so if two objects have the same volume but different masses, the one with greater mass will have a higher density.
Density is a measure of how tightly packed the mass of an object is within its volume. If two objects have the same mass but different volumes, the object with the smaller volume will have a higher density as the mass is concentrated in a smaller space. Conversely, the object with the larger volume will have a lower density as the mass is spread out over a larger area.
In vacuum, neither mass nor density will make any difference. Otherwise, air resistance becomes relevant and objects with lower density fall lower.
Yes, of course! Density=mass divided by volume.
Who found (discovered) that objects of different mass and weight fall at the same rate
The density changes with different objects as all have different mass and volume(the space an object occupies) and the more compressed(Compact) the object is the more density it has.
Volume. Density depends on mass and volume. Density = mass/volume. Things that have the exact same mass can have different densities if the volume associated with either are different.
Two objects can have different volumes but the same density if they are made of different materials. Density is a measure of how much mass is packed into a certain volume, so objects with different volumes can still have the same density if their masses are adjusted accordingly.
Objects have different mass because they not weighted the same..
will have a higher density. Density is the mass of an object per unit volume, so if two objects have the same volume but different masses, the one with greater mass will have a higher density.
Their masses are different. (Mass = density * volume)
Density is a measure of how tightly packed the mass of an object is within its volume. If two objects have the same mass but different volumes, the object with the smaller volume will have a higher density as the mass is concentrated in a smaller space. Conversely, the object with the larger volume will have a lower density as the mass is spread out over a larger area.
Density. This is quantified as a mass over a volume, so if you know the volume, the density will allow you to determine the mass of an object. Density equals mass divided by volume so mass is equal to density multiplied by volume.
Mass does not directly affect the density of an object. Density is determined by the mass of an object divided by its volume. Two objects with the same volume but different masses will have different densities.