Yes, when the object is submerged in water then water exerts opposite buoyonci force which decrease the weight of object.
Weight is the measurement of gravitational force on an object, relevant to Earth.
the weight of the displaced water is equal to the weight of the object
I do not know the answer.The difference between mass and capacity is that capacity is how much something can hold and mass is the weight of an object.
A scale.
volume is how much space is in an object (an object with more volume would be bigger) weight is how heavy an object feels due to gravity (an object with more weight would be harder to lift) density is how much matter is in an amount of space (an object with more density would weigh as much as an object with less density but in a smaller space/volume)
Gravity affects weight, it does not affect mass.
No it does not, but it might affect the volume of the object (it might shrink or expand).
Temperature does not affect the weight of an object. That is, unless you burn it or boil it.
The location like moon will affect its weight but not the mass
Only the object's mass.
It is not the weight of the immersed object but the volume of the object would affect the buoyant force on the immersed object because the buoyant force is nothing but the weight of the displaced liquid whose volume is equal to that of the immersed object.
Yes. Mass is constant for a given object. Weight is a function of mass and gravity, stronger gravity more weight.
yes By snerderwerder (my nickname)
weight is the force gravity exerts on an object. Therefore, it means that the greater weight an object has, the greater force is needed to move it in the opposite direction.
Not at all. (The buoyancy force equals the weight if the displaced water,)
Weight is how great or small the affect of gravity is on an object, whereas mass is the amount of physical particles in an object.
the weight of the object, what its outside consists of, the nature of the surface it resting on.