Yes. A balloon has mass.
The atomic mass of nitrogen (N) is approximately 14.01 atomic mass units.
314 N + 271 N = 585 N BUT mass is not the same as weight! Weight is measured in Newtons (N) and mass in Kg. On Earth, 9.8N/Kg is the weight to mass ratio, so... 585 divided by 9.8 is roughly 60, so... Total mass = 60 Kg (585 N)
a mass in a math is the weight in n object
3000kg. kilograms is a measurement for mass.
A = Mass Number Z = Atomic Number N = Neutron A - Z = N
Neither. Mass is mass. Newtons is a force not a mass, 30 N is the same on Mars or anywhere else. It is 30 N
the answer of this problem is 400 N and the weight of this is that the mass of the football payler i
100 N is a force. An object of mass about 10.2Kg would experience a gravitational force of 100N.
The mass of a person who weighs 400 N can be calculated using the formula: weight = mass * gravity, where gravity is approximately 9.8 m/s^2. Therefore, mass = weight / gravity, which gives a mass of about 40.8 kg for a person who weighs 400 N.
By N, I assume you mean Nitrogen. Nitrogen's Atomic number is 7, and its atomic mass is ~14.011.
Nitrogen has an average atomic mass of about 14 while hydrogen has an average atomic mass of about 1, so the total molecular mass of NH3 is about 17. From this we find that the mass percentage of N in NH3 is about 14/17 = 82%. To get more precise numbers, look up the exact atomic masses from a periodic table.
Weight = (mass) x (gravity)Mass = (weight) / (gravity) = (39.2 N) / (9.8 m/sec2) = 4 kilograms