If you were to say that it's possible, we would say that your statement is false.
because bouyant force is the result of the displacement of the fluid an object is in, if a fluis is displaced by the volume of an object the weight of the fluid being displaced is pushing up on the object
False, this is Archimedes's Principle.
True. A body of mass M will have zero weight in outer space.
That is true! Weight is how much gravity is pulling on an object. For example, on the moon, an object will weigh about 6 times less than it does on Earth. Mass, on the other hand, stays the same ALL THE TIME, no matter where you are.
False. You will know nothing at all about any force acting perpendicular to the direction of motion.
because bouyant force is the result of the displacement of the fluid an object is in, if a fluis is displaced by the volume of an object the weight of the fluid being displaced is pushing up on the object
False It should read: The amount of matter in an object is its mass (not weight)
false
False
2nd answer: In fact, weight = mass if the massive object is on Earth.
False
False, this is Archimedes's Principle.
False, this is Archimedes's Principle.
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.
True. A body of mass M will have zero weight in outer space.
false
That is true! Weight is how much gravity is pulling on an object. For example, on the moon, an object will weigh about 6 times less than it does on Earth. Mass, on the other hand, stays the same ALL THE TIME, no matter where you are.