A feather or a helium balloon are examples of objects that have very little mass.
Density is the mass of an object divided by its volume. An object with little mass but a very small volume can still have a high density because density is a measure of how much mass is packed into a given volume. Conversely, an object with more mass but a larger volume might have a lower density because the mass is spread out over a larger area.
because its dodobird
An object can have a lot of mass but little volume if the particles making up the object are densely packed together. For example, a material like lead is very dense, so even a small volume of lead can have a lot of mass. This can result in objects that are heavy but take up little space.
well if it has little mass it has little weight and if you have a lot of mass the possibility of it would be that it weights a lot
The measure of the quantity of matter that an object contains is called mass. Mass is a fundamental property of an object that remains constant regardless of its location.
Density is the mass of an object divided by its volume. An object with little mass but a very small volume can still have a high density because density is a measure of how much mass is packed into a given volume. Conversely, an object with more mass but a larger volume might have a lower density because the mass is spread out over a larger area.
because its dodobird
An object can have a lot of mass but little volume if the particles making up the object are densely packed together. For example, a material like lead is very dense, so even a small volume of lead can have a lot of mass. This can result in objects that are heavy but take up little space.
No, volume and mass are independent properties. Volume refers to the amount of space an object occupies, while mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object. Two objects with the same volume can have different masses, and two objects with the same mass can have different volumes.
Technically they are not. Mass is the amount of matter in an object while weight is how much force an object experiences from gravity due to its mass. An object's weight in a gravitational field is directly proportional to its mass: if you double the mass you double the weight. Since the strength of gravity on Earth varies very little an object of a given mass will have pretty much the same weight any where you take it.
Mass and weight are the same thing. *Mass and weight are not the same thing. Mass is the measurement of matter within the object and weight is the force applied to the object from gravity. So, to answer your question a star would have much more mass than weight because there is very little gravity affecting the Sun.
well if it has little mass it has little weight and if you have a lot of mass the possibility of it would be that it weights a lot
It stays the same, the object must have lost electrons and while they do have mass it is so small that is generally ignored. An electron has a mass roughly 1/2000th of a proton or neutron, and those aren't heavy to begin with!The most acceptable answer should be that the mass stays the same.
well think of it like having a small object with little mass then a large object with a lot of mass. Hitting the big object takes more force to make it move and the little object does not take nearly as much force to make it move. i hope this helped!
There is no minimum mass at which point an object (celestial or otherwise) begins to have a gravitational force. Any object with mass has an associated gravitational force. The magnitude of that force is proportional to to the mass of the object - lots of mass results in lots of gravitational force; little masses result in only little gravitational force.
It will get wet.
The electron has very little mass compared to the proton or neutron.