You cannot calculate weights to percentages. Percentages are comparisons of two related quantities so you can have one weight as a percentage of another weight, but not by itself.
In the metric system they weight is measured in Newton. Not gram or kilogram, which are measures of mass, not weight.
The ratio of two equal quantities is 1 .
An equation states that the two quantities on each side of the equal sign are equal.
It will depend on the weight. It will require at least two because it is oversized.
The answer will depend on (a) whet the dimensions of the two quantities are, and (b) what the missing operator between the two quantities is.
Fundamental quantities are those which do not depend on other quantities. (i.e. temperature, mass, length)Derived quantities are those which depend on fundamental quantities. (i.e. force, volume, density)
volume and weight
Weight depends on an object's mass and the acceleration due to gravity.
independent variables are quantities which are not affected by another quantities...for eg. time....mass of a stationary body etc....whereas dependent quantities depend on other physical quantities like weight of a body that at any instant of time depends on the height at which the object is located above surface of earth
You cannot calculate weights to percentages. Percentages are comparisons of two related quantities so you can have one weight as a percentage of another weight, but not by itself.
The mass, and how it is distributed- how far the masses are on average from the axis of rotation. However, it is the square of the distance that counts in this case.
mass, velocity, and radius.
No, weight is not a fundamental quantity.
The quotient of two quantities called a ratio.
Any two non-zero quantities are always proportional. If the two quantities are X and Y, they are proportional to X/Y.
What is called a statement of comparing of two or more different quantities