No. It's mass stays the same everywhere, but the weight of that mass depends on the force of
gravity between the object and any other objects that happen to be nearby.
For example, consider a car with a mass of 1,000 kilograms.
If the car is on the earth, its weight is about 9,800 Newtons, which is the same as about 2,200 pounds.
If the car is on the moon, its weight is about 1,630 Newtons, which is the same as about 365 pounds.
If the car is on the International Space Station, its weight is zero.
Weight is affected by gravity, while mass does not. On Earth mass and weight are the same, yet on the moon your weight could be 1/6 of its original, while your mass would stay the same no matter where you go.
The force that makes objects float in a fluid, such as water, is called buoyancy. It occurs when the weight of the displaced fluid is equal to the weight of the object, allowing it to stay afloat.
That is called parallax, a visual effect where objects closer to the viewer appear to move faster than objects further away.
Your weight stays the same when you stand on one foot on the scale. The scale measures the force you exert on it due to gravity, so your weight will remain constant regardless of how you distribute your weight on the scale.
The notion that an object floats if the buoyant force on the object is equal to the object's weight is known as Archimedes' principle. According to this principle, an object will float when the upward force (buoyant force) exerted by the fluid it displaces is equal to the downward force (weight) of the object.
Of course the objects mass will not change. Since there is no gravity in space(moon), only the objects weight will change.No matter where the object the mass will stay the same!
no
yes
actually no, you tend to stay about the same, in a lot of cases people stay at a normal to slighly overweight weight.
Mass remains constant regardless of location, so it stays the same everywhere in the solar system. Weight, however, varies depending on the gravitational force exerted by the celestial body you are on. For example, a person weighs less on the Moon than on Earth due to the Moon's weaker gravity, even though their mass remains unchanged.
It does neither. Your metabolism will stay the same regardless of your weight or weight loss.
Yes. Momentum is conserved.
The most important thing is that mass is not the same as weight.Mass is the same everywhere in the universe; it refers to how much stuff a thing is made of.Weight is the measurement of gravity on an object. So when gravity changes, weight changes. However, mass will always stay the same.Weight will be less on the moon.Mass is the same no matter where the object is!
Weight is affected by gravity, while mass does not. On Earth mass and weight are the same, yet on the moon your weight could be 1/6 of its original, while your mass would stay the same no matter where you go.
An object's weight is the force exerted on it by gravity and can change depending on the strength of the gravitational field it is in; for example, an object weighs less on the Moon than on Earth. However, the object's mass, which is a measure of the amount of matter it contains, remains constant regardless of its location or the gravitational field. Thus, while weight can vary with gravity, mass stays the same.
Because mass is not the same as weight. Weight is mass times gravity so your weight will change if you are on the earth or moon but your mass will stay the same.
Water will stay the same weight when it is frozen, it still has the same molecules that it started with