to place an object in a fluid is... boring
Bouyancy is defined as the force on a object submerged in a fluid equal to the difference in weight of the object and the fluid displaced. If the total weight of the object is the same as the same volume of the fluid, the bouyant force is zero, and the object will stay in the same place.
As an object sinks in a fluid the buoyant force on it would remain the same.
-- Make the object bigger, by inflating it, or by beating it thin and forming it into a hollow box or ball. -- Place it in a fluid that has greater density than the fluid it's in now.
We say the liquid exerts pressure on the object.
The object's density.If less than the density of the fluid, the object floats.If more than the density of the fluid, the object sinks.
Bouyancy is defined as the force on a object submerged in a fluid equal to the difference in weight of the object and the fluid displaced. If the total weight of the object is the same as the same volume of the fluid, the bouyant force is zero, and the object will stay in the same place.
As an object sinks in a fluid the buoyant force on it would remain the same.
An object would float on a fluid if the density of the object was less than the density of the fluid.
-- Make the object bigger, by inflating it, or by beating it thin and forming it into a hollow box or ball. -- Place it in a fluid that has greater density than the fluid it's in now.
The object would behave as a part of fluid and it will remain where it is kept.
When you have the density of both the object and the fluid, just see which has a higher density. If the object has a higher density than the fluid, the object will sink. If the object has a lower density than the fluid, the object will float.
We say the liquid exerts pressure on the object.
The object's density.If less than the density of the fluid, the object floats.If more than the density of the fluid, the object sinks.
If an object sinks in a fluid then it has a density greater than the fluid. This assumes the object is solid and not shaped like a boat.
An object will float in a fluid if it is less dense than that fluid, because the mass of that object displaces less of the fluid than is the volume of the object. An object denser than that fluid would continue to displace the fluid until it met something either solid or more dense.
Two answers to this: 1. If the object floats on the fluid, then it displaces its own mass in fluid. 2. If the object sinks, it will displace its own volume in fluid.
The object will sink in the fluid.