they are the same thing.
Which term describes how much space a substance occupies? volume Not sure how that question relates to the one initially asked, but the answer to 'How is measurement of weight different from measurement of mass?' is weight includes the force of gravity. Weight Includes The Force Of Gravity (A+)Weight is the measurement of the force of gravity in relation to mass, while mass is the measurement of matter in an object.
Mass is the mass, weight is mass with gravity acting upon it
No Weight is a measurement of force... mass is not.
Weight.
Scientists use both; but normally mass is used somewhat more than weight.
Weight is not a physical property of an object, it is an effect, which varies from place to place. A given object will have the same mass no matter whether it is on the Earth, or on Mars, or somewhere in between.
They are different because mass is a measurement of the amount of matter in an object, weight is the quantity of heaviness.
No Weight is a measurement of force... mass is not.
a scale
They are different because mass is a measurement of the amount of matter in an object, weight is the quantity of heaviness.
effectively, weight is the measurement of gravity pulliing the object to the earth. Scientists tend to measure things in terms of mass or displacement, due to the fact that gravity varies greatly in space, on the moon, etc.
That's what's usually called the object's "weight", at least on Earth.