Eureka! Episode 7 - Weight vs. Mass

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Uploaded by on Sep 11, 2007

Eureka! explains the difference between weight and mass, and shows how only mass is the same on the moon and on the earth.

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Film & Animation

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Standard YouTube License

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Uploader Comments (bubblebear83)

  • I wanted to put two episodes together, but at that time I could not because they only accept 10 minutes at 100MB. Now its 10 minutes at 1 GB.

  • hey erm i juz wanna know bubblebear.........where do u get these vids. they are really cool.

  • It was aired on television near my area. I requested it to be on air like a year ago. Good thing, they reaired it because the reception was bad when Eureka 7-12, the reception was bad.

  • A nice vedio i could give it to my teacher and my homework is done i no time.!!!!!!!!!

  • Oh Salimsoussi, you teacher may not like that referring to QshesshoumaruQ's comment.

Top Comments

  • LOL! you don't have a weight problem you have a mass problem!

  • so i'm not fat...i'm massive....thats one way to boost my self esteem! lol i like these eureka clips, very informative! i watch these at school!

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All Comments (56)

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  • can someone translate me what the video says from 2.00 to 2.14?

  • why do people say ramdom teachers names??? Someone plz explain...

  • anyone from ms. wuertz scince class?

  • i thought the acceleration of everything on earth was 9.8m/s

  • Anybody from Mrs Trans Year 7 Science class?

  • this is an awesome video.

    our science teacher made this homework and it was kinda fun =)

  • I looked up anime and this came up....WTF?

  • This is brill!

  • lol anyone here from mackillop year 8 science class?

  • "you will have noticed by now that you can find the weight by multiply kg by 10...". No, I would not have noticed that. And why do tutorials always skim over bits like that, and drone on and on and on and on with cartoons and the easy stuff we already know? "Newton was scientist who had an apple fall on his head. Here is an apple. And here is a goofy cartoon character juggling a bunch of apples... and 1 Newton times 10 m/s/s is 10 kg meters per second per second moving right along here are toons

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