is it 69 grams
A body's mass is invariant regardless of its position in space. Therefore, the chair's mass on Mercury will be identical to the chair's mass on Earth, that is 10 kilograms.
In general a chair will have more mass than a pillow.
Your center of gravity is too far to the rear. Leaning forward transfers the weight to the front where your legs can lift you up to stand.
Weight = (mass) x (acceleration due to gravity)= 90kg x 9.8ms-2= 882N
Anything that had mass & takes up space like for example a chair, book,& pencil are matter
A body's mass is invariant regardless of its position in space. Therefore, the chair's mass on Mercury will be identical to the chair's mass on Earth, that is 10 kilograms.
In general a chair will have more mass than a pillow.
The Presider's Chair is the priest's chair to sit on during the Mass:)
you
The unit "kilogram" is a measure of mass, not weight, so the mass would still be 10 kg on Mercury.However, a scale on Mercury's surface would show that the 10-kilogram item weighed only 3.8 kilograms, about 38% of its Earth weight.
500
Your center of gravity is too far to the rear. Leaning forward transfers the weight to the front where your legs can lift you up to stand.
mass is a substance so mass takes up space so it technallly could be a chair a mountain a glass of water or a flower
a mass structure is a pile of the same or similar materials such as a dam, a snowpile, pile of leaves, etc. a chair is a frame structure
Verner Panton is famous for his unique furnitures. The Stacking chair or S chair, which would become his most famous and mass-produced design.
The priest is the presider at Mass and sits in the larger chair. The smaller one is for the deacon if assigned to the parish, and is there whether or not he is present. For prayer services with no priest, the deacon sits in the presider chair.
Yes. All things have mass. An apple has mass. Your chair has mass. The air you breathe has mass. Mass is the amount of matter in any substance, whether that is a peach, the peach tree, the water it absorbs, the sugar it produces, the carbon dioxide it "breathes," and everything else around you.