Yes.
The spring balance is affected by the local force of gravity. It measures the force applied to an object based on the extension of a spring, which changes due to the gravitational force acting on the object. Beam and analytical balances operate based on comparing weights and are not affected by the force of gravity.
A beam of light is simply referred to as light or a light beam.
Another name for the beam of light from a flashlight is a "light beam" or "beam of light."
No, only weight is affected by gravity: attraction, force, acceleration.
Another name for light beam is ray of light. Other similar names are beam of light, shaft of light, and irradiation.
It is massless and it is not affected by gravity.
light is made up of small energy packets known as photons which are massless and as gravity depends on the mass of the particle therefore there is no gravitational force applied on or applied by a beam of light.
The spring balance is affected by the local force of gravity. It measures the force applied to an object based on the extension of a spring, which changes due to the gravitational force acting on the object. Beam and analytical balances operate based on comparing weights and are not affected by the force of gravity.
Yes. I suppose it would be hard to verify through experiment, but there is no specific reason why it shouldn't - basically, it has mass. Even light is affected by gravity.
A beam of light is simply referred to as light or a light beam.
that depends on the refractive index of the surface refracting the light beam. This is also affected by the light's wavelength and temperature of the media. Sage.
Another name for the beam of light from a flashlight is a "light beam" or "beam of light."
Everything can be affected by gravity, it just needs to be close enough. Even light can be affected by gravity! But I'm not much of a science person, so if you want a more detailed answer, better ask an expert ^^
a type of light, from a beam of light
A light beam or beam of light is a narrow cone of light energy radiating from a small source. In optics, a ray is an idealized narrow beam of light.
No, only weight is affected by gravity: attraction, force, acceleration.
Yes, in space, gravity can actually create a curve in a light beam. Basically, gravity can manipulate it's surroundings giving it somewhat some form of visibility.