Temperature has no effect upon mass.
If you boil a liquid, some of it will evaporate off. This may have the effect of lowering the mass of what remains. But the mass should remain constant. What would change, however, is the volume and density, in accordance with the famous equation: m=vd.
Mass is the product of volume and density.
Changing the shape of an object does not affect its mass. The mass of an object remains constant regardless of its shape because mass is a measure of the amount of matter present in an object. Changing the shape may affect the object's volume and density, but not its mass.
No.The mass of an object is a property that remains constant, no matter where you take it or what you do to it ... short of cutting a piece off, of course.Actually, to a very slight degree, the mass is increased, because heat is energy and with a transfer of energy there is a transfer of mass: E=mc^2
No, the size of an object does not affect the amount of matter it has. The amount of matter in an object is determined by its mass, which remains the same regardless of its size.
No, thermal energy does not affect mass. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter an object contains, while thermal energy is a measure of the internal energy of an object due to the movement of its particles.
The mass of an object does not change unless matter is added to or removed from the object. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object and remains constant in the absence of any external factors affecting it.
Changing the shape of an object does not affect its mass. The mass of an object remains constant regardless of its shape because mass is a measure of the amount of matter present in an object. Changing the shape may affect the object's volume and density, but not its mass.
No.The mass of an object is a property that remains constant, no matter where you take it or what you do to it ... short of cutting a piece off, of course.Actually, to a very slight degree, the mass is increased, because heat is energy and with a transfer of energy there is a transfer of mass: E=mc^2
No, the size of an object does not affect the amount of matter it has. The amount of matter in an object is determined by its mass, which remains the same regardless of its size.
No, heating peanut butter will not increase its mass. Heating it may change its viscosity, making it easier to spread, but it will not physically increase in mass.
No, thermal energy does not affect mass. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter an object contains, while thermal energy is a measure of the internal energy of an object due to the movement of its particles.
The amount of matter in an object is mass.
The mass of an object does not change unless matter is added to or removed from the object. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object and remains constant in the absence of any external factors affecting it.
The amount of matter in an object is called mass.
Mass is a scalar quantity that represents the amount of matter in an object. It is not a force itself, but it does affect the gravitational force experienced by an object.
Its mass.
The quantity of matter in an object is called mass.
A change of state does not affect an object's mass because mass remains constant regardless of the state of matter (solid, liquid, gas). The state change only impacts the arrangement and movement of the particles within the object, not the total amount of matter it contains.