As relevant to the question here, an object’s mass refers to an intrinsic property of the object while weight refers to a force that depends on the local gravitational field. So, if an object moves between planets with different gravitational pull, the object’s weight would change but its mass would not.
The third option would thus be the correct one (the object of an invariant mass would have a lesser weight on planet B than on planet A).
There are a few theories as to what defines our traits to create our personality
According to one such theory, Dan P. McAdams claims our personalities develop in <span>three </span>stages:
<span>Our genes cause genetic mutations forming a 'draft' personality.During our early upbringing, our parents, teachers and friends treat us differently based on our looks and draft personality.Once we are older we then form a narrative of our lives based on our experiences growing up, and make decisions consistent with the character we have created.</span>
So our traits started from slight genetic variances, which effected how we were treated, which then shapes our own self-narrative. So really, our personality is one big story that we tell ourselves, and our childhood was the prologue to that story.
<span>In bacteria, DNA polymerase adds an incorrect base to a growing strand of DNA about once in every 100 000 bases added. The result is a mismatch such as the pairing of A with C.
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~Hello there! ^_^
Your question: What subatomic particle(s) has a mass of 1 AMU?
Your answer: Both proton and electron have the same mass of 1 AMU.
Hope this helps~