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buoyancy
Buoyant is an adjective and it means 'able to float'. Example: The inner tube was buoyant.
If it weighs 180 newtons on dry land, and right now it's floating, then right now the buoyant force on itis 180 newtons. It doesn't matter how high or low it's riding in the water.
When a floating submarine submerges, it deliberately goes beneath the surface - which it is designed to do
The weight must be less than the buoyant force. Push down on a floating cork and it will sink below the surface. Stop pushing and remove your hand, and the cork's buoyancy will take over and the cork will float again.
Dengue mosquito eggs are not floating on the surface of the water, instead the eggs are located just right beneath the surface of water.
Objects that float on water are less dense than water. Objects/liquid will arrange themselves from the highest density in the lowest layers to lowest density in the upper layers of a liquid (like water) However, buoyant forces can keep an object floating on the surface of water too. If the force of buoyancy is equal to the force of gravity, the object will not sink beneath the surface of the water.
Buoyant - is something that 'floats' on the surface of whatever medium it is resting on. For example a boat on water is buoyant.
Beneath the Surface was created in 1998.
The crustal plates of the earth are less dense than the magma below. In a very real sense, we are floating on top of the magma.
No.
The buoyant force pushes you toward the surface.