no it does not remain contant.
Yes, Mass remains constant because the definition of mass does not mean weight. Mass means the amount of room and object takes.
The support provided by 5 samples would be 5 times greater than that of 1 sample, but the weight expressed by the 500 gram weight remains constant.
Density is mass per unit volume. Since there is no information on the volume of the object, the question cannot be answered. Furthermore, mass is only indirectly related to weight. Weight is the force experienced by a mass under the influence of a gravitational force. However, while the mass of a body remains constant, its weight will depend on the gravitational force acting upon it. On the moon, for example, a body will weigh only a sixth as much as it does on earth. So you cannot use weight in calculating density.
Mass is a property of matter and is therefore a constant. Weight however can change, it is the force exerted by that mass in a gravity field. Thus in different gravity fields a constant mass will weigh differently. Weight = Mass * the acceleration of gravity.
The law of constant proportions, also called Proust's law, states that the elements in a compound are all present in a fixed proportion by weight, regardless of how the compound is prepared.
No. It is the mass that stays the same everywhere in the universe.
The same as on earth because mass remains constant everywhere if you are thinking about the "weight" then it will be changed .
Weight
the weight will decrease
Mass is a constant everywhere in the universe. The weight on the moon is about one sixth of the weight on the earth, because the mass of the moon is about one sixth of the mass of the earth reducing the force of gravity.
The object would have the same mass as mass remains constant everywhere. On the other hand if it was weight it would change as weight = mass multiplied with gravitational force.
Yes, an object's weight can change even if its mass remains constant. This happens if it moves to a place with different gravity. An object on the Moon would weigh only one sixth of what it did on Earth.
false
The weight of the Moon is approximately 7.35 x 10^22 kilograms. It's important to note that weight is a force, and it depends on the gravitational pull acting on an object. The weight of an object can vary depending on its location in the universe because gravity is not uniform everywhere. On the Moon, where the gravitational force is weaker than on Earth, an object would weigh less than it does on Earth. However, the mass of the Moon remains constant regardless of its location in the solar system.
It is possible for objects weight's to change, while its mass remains constant.
Yes. Ride an elevator and your weight changes, but your mass remains constant.
Constant