Determination of mass

How to determine mass of a body

The conventional method of finding the mass of a body in the laboratory is by physical balance. The mass can be determined to an accuracy of 1 mg. Now−a−days, digital balances are used to find the mass very accurately. The advantage of digital balance is that the mass of the object is determined at once.

Scales measure weight, but to calculate body density we need mass.  Some scales read off mass, such as the electronic scale in the image below, even though they actually measure weight.

Mass can be determined from a weight because weight is just the force of gravity on the body and force of gravity depends on mass in a known way. On the surface of the Earth, the force gravity on an object is related to its mass by the equation:

Force of gravity = mass x acceleration due to gravity               (equ 1)

The acceleration due to gravity on Earth, typically abbreviated to g, has a value of 9.8 m/s2 and doesn’t change much over the entire surface of the Earth. Therefore we (and scales) can measure weight and then use equation (1) above to calculate mass. Understanding why the constant g is called the acceleration due to gravity requires introducing acceleration, which we will do in a later unit, so for now we recognize it as a constant value that relates mass and weight for objects on the surface of Earth.

Force is a vector, so we need to specify a direction for the gravitational force, which is always down toward Earth’s center. We can summarize the previous equation in symbol form:

F = mg                                                                              (equ. 2)

Calculating Body Density
We now know how to measure volume by displacement and how to determine mass from a weight measurement so we should be able to determine body density. First we measure the weight, then calculate the mass. Dividing the mass by the volume found from our displacement measurement will give us the body density.

Body Weight and Mass on the Moon
The value of g only holds constant near the surface of the Earth, and therefore scales that use equation (1) to calculate mass from measured weight will read incorrect results. For example, your mass doesn’t change just because you go to the moon (there isn’t suddenly less matter inside you), but your weight does change. In fact if you stood on a scale on the moon it would measure a weight about 1/6 of what it would read on Earth. The scale wouldn’t know you were on the moon instead of the Earth, so if the scale then tried to calculate your mass from weight, it would read a mass that is 1/6 the actual value. Of course you didn’t lose 5/6 of yourself on the way there, so that would not be correct.

Universal Law of Gravitation
When you do want to calculate the force of gravity and you are not near the surface of the Earth then use the Universal Law of Gravitation.
The Universal Law of Gravitation states that the gravitational force between two objects depends on the mass of each object (m1 and m2) and the distance between their centers, (r). To calculate the gravitational force we need to multiply the two masses together, divide by the distance between them squared, and finally multiply by the universal gravitational constant G, which always has the same value of 6.67408 x 10^-11 m^3/kgs2. Universal law of gravitation equation as below:

\begin{equation*} $F_g = G\frac{m_1 m_2}{r^2} \end{equation*}                                                                  (equ. 3)