Whether an object sinks or floats depends more on its density than its weight. That's why a coin will sink but a ship will float. The Dead Sea's waters are much saltier than normal sea water, and it's been calculated that any object with a density of less than roughly 1.24 kg/liter will float.
Nothing . He is dead
Nothing . He is dead
88 lbs
10 billion dead puppies
yes because you can weigh the object but you don't change the object at all
you The Stones of the Pyramids at Giza weigh this much
87.979 kg on Venus.
Any object on the moon weighs 1/6th of what it weighs on Earth. For e.g., a 6kg object will weigh only 1kg on the moon.
1000,0000,00000,00000,00000,000000,00000 times as much you would weigh on planet earth
He doesn't weight anything. He has been dead at least 100 years.
The dead fish would still weigh 1kg because weight is a property that remains constant regardless of added weight.
An object with twice the mass of another will weigh twice as much when both objects are on the same planet or celestial body with a constant gravitational acceleration. Weight is directly proportional to mass when the gravitational acceleration remains constant.