When something gets bigger, it means that its size, volume, or dimensions increase. This can be due to growth, inflation, expansion, or enlargement.
Thermal expansion is when something gets bigger (expands) as it gets hotter and smaller (contracts) as it gets colder. This happens because the particles inside the object move faster and spread out when heated, causing the object to expand. This phenomenon is why bridges have gaps and train tracks have small spaces between the rails.
The dawn, and the area covered by ice-floes.
Not necessarily. For example a balloon is bigger than a baseball, but which weighs more?
Gravity gets stronger with larger masses. The force of gravity is directly proportional to the mass of the objects involved, meaning that the larger the mass, the stronger the gravitational pull between the objects.
If the size of an object gets bigger, the speed of the particles within it generally decreases. This is because the larger size allows for more interactions and collisions between the particles, which can lead to a decrease in overall kinetic energy and thus a decrease in speed.
When something gets hot it expands and when it gets cold it'll contract
When the numerator gets bigger, the fraction gets bigger; that is, it has a greater value The opposite is true if the denominator gets bigger; in this case the the fraction gets smaller; that is, it has a lesser value
When it gets sucked into another planets gravitational pull, or something bigger than it.
something little gets eaten by something bigger that it so a
I think you mean what gets bigger the more you take away from it, the answer is a hole
yes it gets bigger
As m, in the equation y=mx+b, gets bigger the line begins to get steeper.
no it does not get bigger
It Gets Bigger - 2012 was released on: USA: 10 April 2012
No, you say bigger......something is bigger
As the slope gets bigger the graph becomes closer to vertical - from bottom left to top right.
It cannot get any bigger.