Adding mass to an elastic band increases the tension in the band, causing it to stretch further. This is due to the increase in gravitational force acting on the mass, which the band must counteract to maintain equilibrium. The band stretches until the force exerted by the tension equals the force of gravity acting on the mass.
When you add salt to water, the total mass of the water solution increases because the salt also contributes to the total mass. However, the salt dissolves into the water, so the mass of the water molecules themselves remains the same.
If you add more of the same substance to an object, the density of the object will increase. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of an object by its volume, so as you add more substance, the mass increases but the volume does not increase proportionally, resulting in a higher density.
The length of the spring increases when you add a mass to it due to the force of gravity pulling the mass downwards and stretching the spring. This change in length is proportional to the weight of the added mass and the spring's stiffness.
To change the mass of an object, you would need to add or remove matter from the object. To increase the mass, you can add more matter such as by attaching additional objects or filling it with a denser material. To decrease the mass, you can remove matter from the object such as by cutting or removing parts of it.
Yes, the mass of the balloon increases as you put in more air because air has mass. The more air you add to the balloon, the more mass it will have.
-ize makes the verb elasticize which mean to make elastic
To calculate mechanical energy, you typically add the kinetic energy (0.5 * mass * velocity^2) to the potential energy (mass * gravity * height). The total mechanical energy is the sum of these two forms of energy.
When you add salt to water, the total mass of the water solution increases because the salt also contributes to the total mass. However, the salt dissolves into the water, so the mass of the water molecules themselves remains the same.
anything that stretches or compresses can store elastic energy. most common example is a coil spring. It has an equilibrium position, and you must do work (add energy) on it to move it from that position. That energy input is stored in the form of elastic energy.
If you add more of the same substance to an object, the density of the object will increase. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of an object by its volume, so as you add more substance, the mass increases but the volume does not increase proportionally, resulting in a higher density.
The length of the spring increases when you add a mass to it due to the force of gravity pulling the mass downwards and stretching the spring. This change in length is proportional to the weight of the added mass and the spring's stiffness.
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The mass of an electron is almost entirely negligible compared to the mass of an atom. I'm not sure if that's the question you were asking, but you can essentially ignore electron mass when calculating the mass of an atom; an electron's mass is only about 0.0005 amu, so even for the heaviest elements the total mass of the electrons is still a tiny fraction of an amu.
Add mass, add force.
mass is just the amount of weight or pressure add on to something
The mass number = protons + neutrons
To calculate the atomic mass of an element, add up the mass of protons and nuetrons.