That's called Archimedes' principle.
But it should be the force "ON an object", not the force "OF an object".
Seems to me like the difference is significant.
Archimedes'
because bouyant force is the result of the displacement of the fluid an object is in, if a fluis is displaced by the volume of an object the weight of the fluid being displaced is pushing up on the object
That's known as "Archimedes' Principle".
buoyant
False, this is Archimedes's Principle.
That's known as "Archimedes' Principle".
It says that the buoyant force acting on the object is equalto the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
Archimedes'
because bouyant force is the result of the displacement of the fluid an object is in, if a fluis is displaced by the volume of an object the weight of the fluid being displaced is pushing up on the object
That's known as "Archimedes' Principle".
Archimedes Principle states that the buoyant force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by that object.
buoyant
False, this is Archimedes's Principle.
False, this is Archimedes's Principle.
The weight of the bouyant force and the fluid displaced by the object are equal.
The weight of the bouyant force and the fluid displaced by the object are equal.
Archimedes'