no because buoyant means how much can an object float and weight means how much it weighs.
No. The buoyant force on an object is the portion of its weight that appears to vanish when the object is in any fluid (could be either a liquid or a gas). If the object happens to float in a particular fluid, then the buoyant force at that moment is equal to the object's weight. Notice that the buoyant force on an object will be different in different fluids.
No, an object's buoyant force and weight are not the same thing. Weight is the force with which gravity pulls an object downward, while buoyant force is the force exerted by a fluid on an object immersed in it that opposes the object's weight. buoyant force can act in the opposite direction of weight if the object is floating in a fluid.
Buoyant and light-hearted
An object floats in liquid when the weight of the liquid displaced is equal to or greater than the weight of the object. This creates an upward buoyant force that supports the object's weight, allowing it to float. Objects that are less dense than the liquid they are in will float, while objects more dense will sink.
Weight is the objects mass times the gravity. W=mg
I assume you mean "between Earth and other objects". That is called the WEIGHT of the objects.
No
it means if an item can float or not if it can flout it is a buoyant object and if it can't it isn't buoyant
no
Because it's meant to be the biggest waterfaUpthrust in Physics is the force that makes an objects buoyant thus it seems to lose weight in liquids. It is the force that keeps ships and swimmers afloat. In geology it refers to the rising of land to a higher elevation. ll in britain. It's not, though/
I think you mean a buoyant force. When an object is submerged into a liquid, the liquid pushes up on the object with a force equal to the weight of the amount of fluid that is displaced.
Ooooh, tricky question. You said that each object "lost" the same amount of weight in water, and that means that the two objects were the same size (i.e., they displaced the same amount of water when submersed, therefore the same weight loss), but it does not mean they weighed the same to start with. Regardless of their intitial weights, they will lose an amount equal to the weight of water they displace. So, no, the two objects do not necessarily weigh the same in air, but they might. There is no information here to tell you whether they do or do not. Ray