This is like asking: What is the difference between electricity and weight? Mass is the amount of physical material in an object, and gravity is a force. You may be asking about the fact that the mass of an object (under ordinary non-relativistic conditions) remains the same even if the object is floating freely in space. On the other hand, the weight of an object is a measure of the amount of gravitational force exerted on an object. On the surface of the earth, an object may weigh many tons, and have an associated mass measured in grams. That same object is weightless in space but has the same number of grams of mass no matter where it is. This is why you might see answers indicating that the earth or some other planet is weightless. This seems absurd, but it is true. The planets are very massive, but unless you can put them on a scale in a gravitational field, they don't weigh a thing.
Mass is a measurement of matter in an object and gravity is a force that attracts objects and is constantly acting. If an object has mass, it will be affected by gravity if the force of gravity is present. If an object does not have mass, then gravity can't affect it.
mass means the measure of matter in a bodybut gravity means the force with which something attracted towards something.mass always remains same everywhere whereas gravity changes.
-- The mass of one object. -- The mass of the other object. -- The distance between their centers of mass.
weight = mass x gravity
The strength of gravity between 2 bodies depends on your mass and the planet's mass, and the distance between the center of your mass and the center of the planet's mass.
The more massive the mass, the larger the force of gravity The further the distance, the smaller the force of gravity, however gravity is infinite so no matter how far away from any size mass an object is it will always feel the force of gravity from that mass
No. Gravity is not a substance. It is an attractive force between objects with mass.
weight = mass x gravity
Weight = Mass x Gravity
-- The mass of one object. -- The mass of the other object. -- The distance between their centers of mass.
weight = mass x gravity
The strength of gravity between 2 bodies depends on your mass and the planet's mass, and the distance between the center of your mass and the center of the planet's mass.
The more massive the mass, the larger the force of gravity The further the distance, the smaller the force of gravity, however gravity is infinite so no matter how far away from any size mass an object is it will always feel the force of gravity from that mass
No. Gravity is not a substance. It is an attractive force between objects with mass.
Gravity is a force of attraction between objects due to their mass.
There has to be gravity or will we float away. This is why mass and volume were created. To keep on us on the ground. You can't feel gravity but it will always be there. There is a force of attraction between all masses in the universe; the gravity we feel is the attraction between Earth's mass and the mass of our bodies on Earth's surface.
There has to be gravity or will we float away. This is why mass and volume were created. To keep on us on the ground. You can't feel gravity but it will always be there. There is a force of attraction between all masses in the universe; the gravity we feel is the attraction between Earth's mass and the mass of our bodies on Earth's surface.
Weight = mass x gravityWeight = mass x gravityWeight = mass x gravityWeight = mass x gravity
The force of gravity between any two objects depends on . . . -- the mass of the first object -- the mass of the second object -- the distance between their centers of mass.