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How can you find the mass of an object? - Answers

You can find the mass of an object by weighing it in a known gravity field, and then converting between Newtons and KiloGrams. On the Earth, the "normal" gravity field is 9.81 m/s2, and it is common to express mass and weight as the same thing although, technically, it is not. In a zero-g environment, such as in space orbit, you can determine mass by suspending the object between two calibrated springs and bouncing them. You would measure the displacement and period of oscillation, and you would need to know the force of the springs as a function of displacement.



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How can you find the mass of an object? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_can_you_find_the_mass_of_an_object

You can find the mass of an object by weighing it in a known gravity field, and then converting between Newtons and KiloGrams. On the Earth, the "normal" gravity field is 9.81 m/s2, and it is common to express mass and weight as the same thing although, technically, it is not. In a zero-g environment, such as in space orbit, you can determine mass by suspending the object between two calibrated springs and bouncing them. You would measure the displacement and period of oscillation, and you would need to know the force of the springs as a function of displacement.



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_can_you_find_the_mass_of_an_object

How can you find the mass of an object? - Answers

You can find the mass of an object by weighing it in a known gravity field, and then converting between Newtons and KiloGrams. On the Earth, the "normal" gravity field is 9.81 m/s2, and it is common to express mass and weight as the same thing although, technically, it is not. In a zero-g environment, such as in space orbit, you can determine mass by suspending the object between two calibrated springs and bouncing them. You would measure the displacement and period of oscillation, and you would need to know the force of the springs as a function of displacement.

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      You can find the mass of an object by weighing it in a known gravity field, and then converting between Newtons and KiloGrams. On the Earth, the "normal" gravity field is 9.81 m/s2, and it is common to express mass and weight as the same thing although, technically, it is not. In a zero-g environment, such as in space orbit, you can determine mass by suspending the object between two calibrated springs and bouncing them. You would measure the displacement and period of oscillation, and you would need to know the force of the springs as a function of displacement.
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