Yes, liquid and gases exert a buoyant force on object because of the surface tension of the fluid.
cuz they come from your ass duhhhhhhhhh
yes, all fluids wether it is gas or liquid, will experience buoyant force.
No. Gases and liquids are matter. Matter is not a force; it is acted upon by forces. Gases and liquids can exert a force or transmit a force, but they themselves are not forces.
The word conduction only applies to a energy force traveling through a solid, if an energy force was traveling trough a liquid or gas it would be convection.
Yes, liquid and gases exert a buoyant force on object because of the surface tension of the fluid.
Both liquid and gas
cuz they come from your ass duhhhhhhhhh
yes, all fluids wether it is gas or liquid, will experience buoyant force.
Gas expands while water doesn't if you have 8oz of water in a 10oz container then pour it in a 16oz the water will stay 8 oz
No. Gases and liquids are matter. Matter is not a force; it is acted upon by forces. Gases and liquids can exert a force or transmit a force, but they themselves are not forces.
Gas is one of the states of matter. Matter has weight and takes up space. When rocket propellants are burned or oxidized, they give off expanding gases. Since gas is matter the expanding gases exert force.
the answer to thins question in inside your pants hahah but no its resistance
As a rocket burns fuel, it expels exhaust gases. When the gases are forced out of the rocket, they exert an equal and opposite force on the rocket. A rocket can rise into the air because the gases it expels with a downward force exert an equal but opposite force on the rocket. As long as this upward pushing force, called thrust, is greater than the downward pull of gravity, there is a net force in the upward direction. As a result, the rocket accelerates upwards.-information from Prentice Hall, Science Explorer: Physical Science
As a rocket burns fuel, it expels exhaust gases. When the gases are forced out of the rocket, they exert an equal and opposite force on the rocket. A rocket can rise into the air because the gases it expels with a downward force exert an equal but opposite force on the rocket. As long as this upward pushing force, called thrust, is greater than the downward pull of gravity, there is a net force in the upward direction. As a result, the rocket accelerates upwards.-information from Prentice Hall, Science Explorer: Physical Science
As a rocket burns fuel, it expels exhaust gases. When the gases are forced out of the rocket, they exert an equal and opposite force on the rocket. A rocket can rise into the air because the gases it expels with a downward force exert an equal but opposite force on the rocket. As long as this upward pushing force, called thrust, is greater than the downward pull of gravity, there is a net force in the upward direction. As a result, the rocket accelerates upwards.-information from Prentice Hall, Science Explorer: Physical Science
Yes, it can if you fit density of the material to the density of the surrounding media the force is zero.ANS2:The only ways that the buoyant force could be zero is when the object is not in contact with a fluid* such as may be encountered in the vacuum of outer space or when there is no gravitational force pulling the fluid downward. Remember, that the object does not need to be floating for a buoyant force to be acting on it. A brick weighs slightly less because it displaces its volume of air and that air that was displaced is pushing up on the brick.*"Fluid" includes gases and liquids.