No. The force of gravity acting on an object's mass is weight.
The mass of an object depends on the materials out of which it is made.
Mass does not depend on gravity. At zero gravity the object will have the same mass as at a higher gravity. What changes is the object's weight. The fact that the object still has mass can be ascertained from its inertia - it will take a force to make it move, or to stop it.Mass does not depend on gravity. At zero gravity the object will have the same mass as at a higher gravity. What changes is the object's weight. The fact that the object still has mass can be ascertained from its inertia - it will take a force to make it move, or to stop it.Mass does not depend on gravity. At zero gravity the object will have the same mass as at a higher gravity. What changes is the object's weight. The fact that the object still has mass can be ascertained from its inertia - it will take a force to make it move, or to stop it.Mass does not depend on gravity. At zero gravity the object will have the same mass as at a higher gravity. What changes is the object's weight. The fact that the object still has mass can be ascertained from its inertia - it will take a force to make it move, or to stop it.
Any object with mass affects gravity
Gravity increases with mass.
-- The mass of one object. -- The mass of the other object. -- The distance between their centers of mass.
No. Mass and weight are two separate but related properties. Mass is the amount of matter within object. Weight is the amount of force an object experiences due to gravity. So and object's mass depends on the mass of the object and the strength of gravity where it is. Weight= mass x gravity.
The force of gravity on an object is called its weight.Note that mass is what CAUSES this force of gravity.
the more mass the object has the stronger the gravity will pull down on the object making it heavier
No, the more mass of an object the more gravity it exerts.
Any object that has mass - i.e., any object - has gravity.
No mass is not affected by gravity, weight is.
No. Mass, as a quantity, is independent of gravity.