In general a chair will have more mass than a pillow.
The mass of an object remains the same regardless of its location, so the chair still has a mass of 10 kilograms on Mercury. However, the chair's weight would be different due to the difference in gravity between Earth and Mercury.
a larger mass. The force of gravity is directly proportional to the mass of an object. Therefore, the greater the mass, the greater the gravitational force acting on the object.
Other things being equal, more mass will cause more gravity.
The vehicle with the greater mass will have the greater momentum, as momentum is dependent on both velocity and mass.
Typically, if an object has greater mass, it will also have a greater volume due to the relationship between mass and density. Objects with greater mass are usually more compact or denser, resulting in a smaller volume for the same mass.
The mass of an object remains the same regardless of its location, so the chair still has a mass of 10 kilograms on Mercury. However, the chair's weight would be different due to the difference in gravity between Earth and Mercury.
The Presider's Chair is the priest's chair to sit on during the Mass:)
you
Absolutely not!:p
a larger mass. The force of gravity is directly proportional to the mass of an object. Therefore, the greater the mass, the greater the gravitational force acting on the object.
No. The mass of the moon is a fraction of the earth's mass.
The unit "kilogram" is a measure of mass, not weight, so the mass would still be 10 kg on Mercury.However, a scale on Mercury's surface would show that the 10-kilogram item weighed only 3.8 kilograms, about 38% of its Earth weight.
greater
The mass of all caterpillars is greater.
gravity
Other things being equal, more mass will cause more gravity.
Which has a greater atomic mass,flurine