Oh, isn't that a lovely thought? Well, you see, it would take quite a lot of feathers to equal the weight of a brick. Feathers are very light and fluffy, while a brick is quite heavy and solid. So, you'd need a whole bunch of feathers, maybe even a whole pillow's worth, to match the weight of just one brick.
That depends on the volume of the brick. Whatever its volume is, its weight underwater is(weight of the brick in air) minus (weight of an equal volume of water)
The weight of the displaced water is 2/3 the weight of the brick. So the weight of the brick is 3/2 the weight of an equal volume of water ... just another way of saying that the density of the brick is 1.5 gm/cm3.
They can be - it depends on how many bricks, how much cheese and how many feathers.
You hit your head against a brick wall and the brick wall does not move.
That really depends upon the density of the material in question. For example, equal cubic areas of feathers and gold would have different weight values.
The answer is they all weigh the same amount are equal in weight which is different then density
They are both equal in weight.
That depends on the volume of the brick. Whatever its volume is, its weight underwater is(weight of the brick in air) minus (weight of an equal volume of water)
The weight of the displaced water is 2/3 the weight of the brick. So the weight of the brick is 3/2 the weight of an equal volume of water ... just another way of saying that the density of the brick is 1.5 gm/cm3.
Yes, 1kg of feathers is equal in weight to 1kg of stones. However, since feathers are less dense than stones, the volume of 1kg of feathers will be much larger than the volume of 1kg of stones.
In water, the weight of one kilogram of feathers would be slightly less than one kilogram due to the buoyant force acting on the feathers. This is because the feathers displace an amount of water equal to their weight, reducing the net force acting on them.
yes. If you carefully look at the question, you will note that the weight of the objects in question is irrelevant. The questions refers to the weight of one ton. If you took a balance and put one ton on one side and one ton on the other, the balance would level itself because both sides are equal. There fore ONE TON of bowling balls = ONE TON of feathers. The number of each would not be equal, but the weight is the same.
grams are equal to milliliters in volume, but not in weight. (Imagine 10 millilitres of treacle, and 10 grams of feathers, the treacle is going to be heavier)
They are equal weight.
They both weigh the same, one pound. The difference lies in the volume or amount of feathers and concrete needed to reach that weight. Feathers are much less dense than concrete, so a pound of feathers will take up much more space than a pound of concrete.
Yes. Which weighs more, a ton of feathers or a ton of gold. Answer, they both weigh a ton.
They both weigh the same, as a ton is a unit of weight and is the same amount regardless of what substance it applies to.