Some examples are,
hot air ballons,
ships,
bouys,
actually just about anything that floats in air or water :p
phone
leaves
Zero. Points are zero dimensional objects. Straight lines are one dimensional objects. Planes and surfaces are two dimensional objects. Volumes and polyhedra are examples of three dimensional objects.
A picture, a drawing, a screen-shot.
A hexagon has six sides. Examples of objects that are hexagonal in shape include:Hex nutsHoneycombsThe white parts of a soccer ball
Density
buoyant
The buoyant force is 135N
Buoyant force is based upon the mass of the water displaced. Therefore, two objects will have the same buoyant force if they have the some volumes.
Objects are more buoyant in water than in air.
no because buoyant means how much can an object float and weight means how much it weighs.
The buoyant force will be greater on the object in the denser fluid.
Their mass (and the density of the fluid they're floating in).
A few examples are... oyster, coy, buoyant
Ships, boats, anything buoyant, really...
If the weight of an object is greater than its buoyant force, then it will not float - it will sink.
The question makes no sense. Objects are buoyant in a surrounding fluid; change the fluid, change their buoyancy.