A small object with high density, such as a lead weight or a dense metal ball, would have a small capacity but a large mass due to the arrangement of its particles.
An object with a high density, such as a lead ball, can have a small capacity (volume) but a large mass. This is because density is the ratio of an object's mass to its volume, so objects with high density have a lot of mass packed into a small space.
False. Momentum is a product of an object's mass and velocity, so even if the object is small, it can have a large momentum if it has a high velocity. It doesn't need to be stationary to have a large momentum.
Yes, a small object can have more density than a large object if the small object has more mass compared to its volume. Density is calculated as mass per unit volume, so an object with greater mass and smaller volume will have higher density.
According to Newton's second law of motion, the acceleration of an object is dependent on the net force acting on it, not its mass. If the net force acting on both objects is the same, they will both experience the same acceleration, regardless of their mass. This means that a large mass object and a small mass object can have the same acceleration if the force acting on them is equal.
That would depend on what you consider "large".The size of an object's momentum = (its mass) x (its speed).So, more mass and more speed result in more momentum.
An object with a high density, such as a lead ball, can have a small capacity (volume) but a large mass. This is because density is the ratio of an object's mass to its volume, so objects with high density have a lot of mass packed into a small space.
-- a hot-air balloon -- St. Patrick's Cathedral on a snowy day
Usually small metals (e.g magnesium etc) have small capacit but large mass Hope it helps :)
well something with large capacity and small mass is a ballon but I cant think of anything that would be the opposite.... My math assignment told me to figure out something with large mass and small capacity but its just too hard.... hope you find a answer and post it when u do!!!
Because it is lighter.
False. Momentum is a product of an object's mass and velocity, so even if the object is small, it can have a large momentum if it has a high velocity. It doesn't need to be stationary to have a large momentum.
Yes, a small object can have more density than a large object if the small object has more mass compared to its volume. Density is calculated as mass per unit volume, so an object with greater mass and smaller volume will have higher density.
According to Newton's second law of motion, the acceleration of an object is dependent on the net force acting on it, not its mass. If the net force acting on both objects is the same, they will both experience the same acceleration, regardless of their mass. This means that a large mass object and a small mass object can have the same acceleration if the force acting on them is equal.
A hydrogen balloon, or for safety's sake, a helium balloon.
It is not! According to Newton's law the exact opposite is true.
The density of an object is directly correlated with the amount of mass contained in the object. For example, a small object containing a large amount of mass has more density than a larger object with a smaller amount of mass.
That would depend on what you consider "large".The size of an object's momentum = (its mass) x (its speed).So, more mass and more speed result in more momentum.