The force of gravity depends directly on weight.
The weight cannot be 195 grams nor kilograms because these are measures of mass, not weight.The weight will depend on the quantity of platinum and the force of gravity.The weight cannot be 195 grams nor kilograms because these are measures of mass, not weight.The weight will depend on the quantity of platinum and the force of gravity.The weight cannot be 195 grams nor kilograms because these are measures of mass, not weight.The weight will depend on the quantity of platinum and the force of gravity.The weight cannot be 195 grams nor kilograms because these are measures of mass, not weight.The weight will depend on the quantity of platinum and the force of gravity.
volume
No, but the difference between the buoyant force and the weight of the object will determine whether it floats or sinks.
The buoyant force on a floating object depends on the weight of the fluid displaced by the object, not on the weight of the object itself. This is known as Archimedes' principle.
The upward bouyant force depends only on the weight of the displaced fluid. The NET force (object's weight - bouyant force) depends on the object's weight and will determine how fast it sinks.
No. Net force affects motion. So you probably want to ask the question differently.
The buoyant force on a submerged object depends on the volume of the object. It is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object, which is determined by its volume. The weight of the object itself affects the net force experienced by the object when submerged.
The buoyant force on any object in a fluid ... whether partially or fully submerged ... isequal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. That's related to the object'svolume, and has nothing to do with its weight.
yes it is a contributing factor. lets say you were given the weight of a ball in Newtons, lets say 8 Newtons . you would multiply 9.8 0r 10(if you are rounding) by the number of Newtons(8) and you would get your answer in Kilograms. If you are given the Kilograms it is not a contributing factor to weight.
Yes, the buoyant force acting on a submerged submarine depends on the volume of water displaced by the submarine, not directly on its weight. According to Archimedes' principle, the buoyant force is equal to the weight of the water displaced, which is determined by the submarine's submerged volume. However, for the submarine to be neutrally buoyant and maintain a certain depth, its weight must equal the buoyant force.
Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object's mass. It depends on the strength of the gravitational field, which is stronger closer to Earth and weaker farther away. Therefore, an object's weight will be different on Earth compared to other planets or in outer space.
Sort of.Mass is an inherent property of matter.Weight is the measurement of the strength of the pull of a gravity field on a mass.Thus a 1 Kg mass will weigh 1Kg on Earth but only 1/3 Kg on the Moon where the Moons gravity is only 1/3 of that of Earth.Thus mass does relate to weight and as mass is a property of matter weight does depend on matter.