This is not a question. It is a statement with a question mark at the end of it, therefore it can never be answered.
there is no change in the mass of body
1000kg. Mass is an inherent property of an object. It is not affected by where the object is.
If the object's mass is 12 kg, then it's 12 kg. On Earth, on the moon, on Mars, or floating weightless in a space ship coasting from one of them to another. Weight depends on where you are, but mass doesn't.
Mass is the amount of matter in an object. It does not change based on gravity. Weight is the force an object exerts 'downward' due to gravitational acceleration. Force = (mass)*(acceleration). Acceleration due to gravity is less on the Moon than on Earth.
On earth, an object that weighs 230 lbs has a mass of 104.326 kilograms. (rounded) On the moon, an object that weighs 230 lbs has a mass of 639 kilograms. (rounded)
the mass is an invariant: so 25kg mass would still be 25kg mass where ever it was. the force a 25kg mass exerts would change, as the force is a variant that would be altered by the lower gravitational strength of the moon.
Grams are measures of mass, not weight. Mass is independent of gravity. 25kg would still be 25 kg on earth, on the moon, on Saturn or anywhere else you can think of.
The mass of the object, the mass of the object that is attracting it and the distance between their centres of gravity.So your weight on the moon will depend on your mass, the moon's mass and the distance from your centre of gravity to the moon's.The mass of the object, the mass of the object that is attracting it and the distance between their centres of gravity.So your weight on the moon will depend on your mass, the moon's mass and the distance from your centre of gravity to the moon's.The mass of the object, the mass of the object that is attracting it and the distance between their centres of gravity.So your weight on the moon will depend on your mass, the moon's mass and the distance from your centre of gravity to the moon's.The mass of the object, the mass of the object that is attracting it and the distance between their centres of gravity.So your weight on the moon will depend on your mass, the moon's mass and the distance from your centre of gravity to the moon's.
The mass of the Moon, the mass of the object, and the distance to the center of the Moon.
No. The mass of an object does not change. However and object's weight, which is a function of mass and gravity, is less on the moon than on earth.
Because the gravitational force between any two objects depends on the product of both their masses. The object's weight on earth depends on the object's mass and the earth's mass, whereas its weight on the moon depends on the object's mass and the moon's mass. Since the moon's mass is very different from the earth's mass, the object's weight is also different there.
there is no change in the mass of body
The object's mass doesn't change, no matter where it is or where it goes.
10 kilograms, of course. If you take an object to the Moon, its weight will change, but its mass won't.
1000kg. Mass is an inherent property of an object. It is not affected by where the object is.
The mass on the moon will remain the same, 20 kg If the object's mass is 20 kg, then it's 20 kg. On Earth, on the moon, on Mars, or floating weightless in a space ship coasting from one of them to another. Weight depends on where you are, but mass doesn't.
The weight of a 180-kg mass on the surface of the moon, rounded, is 292.1 newtons (65.67 pounds) .