No, the weight of a skeleton can vary based on factors such as bone density, muscle mass, and overall body composition. While height may provide a general indication of skeleton size, it does not necessarily determine the weight of the skeleton.
No, skeletons can vary in weight depending on factors such as the individual's body size, age, and overall bone density. Additionally, a person's lifestyle and diet can also impact the weight of their skeleton.
In the absence of air resistance, different weight balls will hit the ground at the same time when dropped from the same height. This is because all objects fall at the same rate due to gravity, regardless of their mass.
The pressure at the bottom of a container depends on the weight of the fluid above it, which is determined by the height of the fluid. The shape of the container does not affect the pressure at the bottom as long as the fluid column height is the same. The pressure increases with increasing fluid height due to the increase in weight of the fluid.
Both weights will fall at the same rate due to gravity. The acceleration due to gravity is constant regardless of the mass of the object, so both weights will reach the ground at the same time when dropped from the same height.
Two objects of different masses dropped from the same height will hit the ground at the same time because gravity pulls on both objects with the same acceleration, regardless of their mass. This acceleration is a constant value and it causes both objects to fall at the same rate, resulting in them hitting the ground simultaneously.
no people of the same height have diffrent weights, a given height maps to more than one weight
They might, but usually not. There are basically three parts to a person's weight, muscle, fat and skeletal weight. And even if two people have the same height, all three parts can weigh differently.
Anorexic people do not weigh all the same, obviously. It depends on their build and height.
Height is same like great dane, weight is half of that.
The same height and weight is the same BMI, no matter what your age. Sedentary people are likely to gain weight over time, and so older sedentary people are likely to have a higher BMI (higher weight).
No, human hearts do not all weigh the same. The weight of a human heart can vary based on factors such as age, gender, and overall body size. On average, an adult human heart weighs about 250-350 grams.
no
Height does not determine weight. Many children of the same height will vary greatly in weight.
If you measured the size (eg height) of ten thousand people and then added all their heights together and divided this the sum by ten thousand, the answer would be the average height of that population of ten thousand people. If you did the same thing for their weights the result would be the average weight of those people.
it is the same as the length which is the height.the height is how tall the thing is.the width is how long it is.
i am same height and i believe its about 55kg
Yes, people who regularly subject themselves to a lot of physical stress, like many athletes for example, have denser bones.