this is Archimedes' Principle
No. The amount an object weighs is simply called its "weight".
According to Archimedes principle...An object immersed in water experiences a force equal to the weight of the volume of liquid displaced by it. Here the weight of liquid displaced is 15n. So, the upward buoyant force experienced by that object is 15n.
Then the solid object has a greater density and will sink.
An object will sink if it weighs more than the water it pushes away, and an object will float if it weighs less than the water it pushes away. The Greek mathematician Archimedes discovered that the amount of water displaced by an object depends on the mass of that object. Mass is the amount of matter in a substance, and dense objects have more mass than less dense objects. Dense objects that do not displace much water will sink, while less dense objects that displace a lot of water will float.
how much it weighs...how many pounds, tons, ounces....it depends on the object.
"buoyancy"
This is corrent
This is corrent
This is corrent
This is corrent
No. The amount an object weighs is simply called its "weight".
No. The amount an object weighs is simply called its "weight".
No. The amount an object weighs is simply called its "weight".
According to Archimedes principle...An object immersed in water experiences a force equal to the weight of the volume of liquid displaced by it. Here the weight of liquid displaced is 15n. So, the upward buoyant force experienced by that object is 15n.
It sinks. (the object weighs more than the water displaced.)
340 N
weighs less than the material displacing it does.