Student Exploration: Weight and Mass
Student Exploration: Weight and Mass
Student Exploration: Weight and Mass
A. greater on the Moon B. less on the Moon C. same on Earth and the Moon
2. Your mass is the amount of matter, or “stuff,” in your body. How would your mass on the Moon compare to
your mass on Earth? Highlight your answer.
A. greater on the Moon B. less on the Moon C. same on Earth and the Moon
Gizmo Warm-up
On the Weight and Mass Gizmo, you can use a balance to compare
the masses of objects.
1. Place the dog on the right pan of the balance. What happens?
2. Place the 5-kilogram (kg) mass on the other pan. Which has more
mass, the dog or the 5-kg mass?
3. The 5-kg (5,000 gram) mass is heavier than the dog, so take it off the pan and place a 1-kg (1,000 gram)
mass on the pan. Add 1-kg masses to the left pan until it goes down. Then take one of the 1-kg masses off
the pan so that the masses are above the dog.
4. Use this process of adding and subtracting other masses from the left pan until the two pans are balanced.
Add up all the masses on the left pan. This is equal to the mass of the dog. What is the mass of the dog?
You can check your answer by clicking the center of the cross beam of the balance.
2370 g
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Get the Gizmo ready:
Activity A:
● Click Clear scales to remove all objects from the
Weight on spring scale and the balance.
different planets ● Click the center of the cross beam of the balance
to turn off the mass display.
Introduction: A spring scale is used to measure force. Since weight is a type of force, a spring scale can
measure weight. The metric unit of force is the newton (N).
1. Measure: Place the pumpkin on the spring scale. Click the red line on the scale to see the weight
measured to the nearest newton.
2. Predict: If you take an object to a different planet, do you think its weight will stay the same or be different?
Highlight your answer.
Same Different
3. Collect data: Measure the weights of the following objects on Earth, the Moon, Mars, and Jupiter. Record
your measurements in the data table below.
4. Analyze: Does the weight of an object change when it is moved to a different planet?
Yes
5. Extend your thinking: Which celestial body had the strongest gravity, Earth, the Moon, Mars, or Jupiter?
Explain how you know.
Introduction: To find mass using the balance, place the object on the right pan of the balance and then add
and subtract masses until the pans are even. Add up the masses and write each mass in grams. (Remember
there are 1,000 g in 1 kg, so the 1-kg mass equals 1,000 grams.)
1. Predict: If you take an object to a different planet, do you think its mass will stay the same or be different?
Highlight your answer.
Same Different
2. Collect data: Use the balance to measure the masses of the following objects on Earth, the Moon, Mars,
and Jupiter. Record your measurements in the data table below.
3. Analyze: Does the mass of an object change when it is moved to a different planet?
No
4. Draw conclusions: Based on what you have learned about mass and weight, why do you think the mass
did not change but the weight did?
Mass does not change on different planets because the amount of matter in the object does
not change. Weight changes depending on the force due to gravity.
5. Extend your thinking: First, using the balance, find the mass of a pumpkin on Jupiter. Then place the
pumpkin on the spring scale and record its weight. Finally remove the pumpkin and weigh the masses from
the balance on the spring scale. How do the weights compare?
The mass of the Pumpkin on Jupiter is 3060 g and the weight is 75.9 N
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Extension: Get the Gizmo ready:
Question: How strong is gravity on Mars, Jupiter, Earth, and the Moon?
1. Observe: Using the spring scale, measure the weights of objects on different planets. List the three planets
and the Moon from strongest gravity to weakest.
2. Predict: On which planet or moon do you think the 5-kg mass will weigh the most? Least?
3. Collect data: Find the weight of the 5-kg mass at each location.
4. Calculate: Weight depends on mass and the strength of gravity. Estimate the strength of gravity on each
location by dividing the weight of the 5-kg mass by 5.
5. Calculate: First measure the mass of the flowerpot in the Gizmo. Then predict the weight of the flowerpot
on each planet (multiply the mass by that planet’s strength of gravity). Finally check your predictions by
actually weighing the flowerpot on each planet, using the Gizmo.
Reproduction for educational use only. Public sharing or posting prohibited. © 2020 ExploreLearning™ All rights reserved