The bottom of an iceberg is bigger than the top due to the principle of buoyancy and the density of ice compared to water. Ice is less dense than liquid water, which allows only a small portion of the iceberg to remain above the surface. Approximately 90% of an iceberg's mass is submerged, creating a larger submerged volume to maintain equilibrium with the weight of the ice above the waterline. This results in the bottom appearing larger than the part that is visible above the surface.
Typically, about 90% of an iceberg's mass is submerged underwater, while only about 10% is visible above the surface. This means that the portion of the iceberg below the waterline is roughly nine times larger than the portion that is above water. However, the exact ratio can vary depending on the specific density and shape of the iceberg.
There is 90% of an iceberg's volume (and mass) that is underwater.
no it is impossible to do because the bottom must be bigger than the top
Less. And get some exercise.
The bottom of an iceberg is bigger than the top due to the principle of buoyancy and the density of ice compared to water. Ice is less dense than liquid water, which allows only a small portion of the iceberg to remain above the surface. Approximately 90% of an iceberg's mass is submerged, creating a larger submerged volume to maintain equilibrium with the weight of the ice above the waterline. This results in the bottom appearing larger than the part that is visible above the surface.
Typically, about 90% of an iceberg's mass is submerged underwater, while only about 10% is visible above the surface. This means that the portion of the iceberg below the waterline is roughly nine times larger than the portion that is above water. However, the exact ratio can vary depending on the specific density and shape of the iceberg.
No, typically the underwater portion of an iceberg is not bigger than the portion that is visible above water. Icebergs are known to have a larger portion underwater, but this is due to the difference in density between ice and seawater rather than the underwater portion being larger in size.
Some can be, but just the same, some middle and top area fish are bigger than bottom fish.Depends on the fish ;)The largest fish are top dwellers.
An Iceberg Made of water but ice is lighter than water. Nine tenths of an iceberg is below the surface and so it is unseen.
no. it melts An iceberg will float as long as it is in water. If you could put an iceberg in a liquid less dense than ice, the iceberg would sink.
An iceberg floats in the ocean because it is less dense than the water it displaces. Ice has a lower density than liquid water because of its crystalline structure, which allows it to float on the surface.
For each part of the iceberg you see above the surface, there's a much bigger part below the surface, providing buoyancy for the part that is lifted into the air. Just as with ice cubes, most will float below the surface and a little will float above. The size - well, that's determined first by how they break off from glaciers and shelf ice. Later by erosion and melting.
The clinical iceberg is the number of illnesses or diseases that doctors believe go unreported. The condition gets it name from an actual iceberg, of which there is a much larger mass hidden underwater than what can be seen from the surface.
If the bottom layer leaves are small, the would receive lesser sunlight. The top layer leaves are smaller than the bottom layer leaves in size as they can receive more sunlight, thus the bottom layer leaves are larger in size to have a bigger surface area to trap more sunlight. Hope this can help you. '~'
There is 90% of an iceberg's volume (and mass) that is underwater.
By far, the iceberg was much, much larger than Titanic. The upper 10% that was out of the water alone was almost up to the promenade deck and we don't even know how wide it was.