up thrust and gravity
1) FORCE EXERTED BY THE BODY TOWARDS EARTH {WEIGHT} 2) FORCE EXERTED BY WATER ON THE BODY [DUE TO DISPLACED WATER] NOTE:- HERE THERE WILL BE NO VISCOUS FORCE
A body floating in water has two forces acting on it: buoyant force pushing the body up and gravity pulling it down. The buoyant force is equal to the weight of the water displaced by the body, while gravity pulls the body downward.
The two forces acting on a sinking object are gravity, pulling the object downward, and buoyancy, pushing the object upward. Buoyancy force is caused by the displaced fluid pushing back against the object's weight, resulting in the object sinking, floating, or rising depending on the balance between these forces.
Thrust & gravity.
When two forces are acting on an object in the same direction, we combine them by adding their magnitudes together to find the net force acting on the object.
When two forces are acting on an object in opposite directions, we combine them by finding the difference between the magnitudes of the two forces. The direction of the resulting force will be in the direction of the larger force.
A force of 200*sqrt(2) = 282.8427N (to 4 dp) acting at 45 degrees to the two original forces.
If the resultant of all the forces acting on a body is zero, the forces are called balanced forces. 2 types of unbalanced forces are naet force and resultant force.
it takes about 18 hours on a plane on a boat about 2 weeks and in a car it would be impossible unless you have a floating car in thaty case refer to the boat time
it takes about 18 hours on a plane on a boat about 2 weeks and in a car it would be impossible unless you have a floating car in thaty case refer to the boat time
Yes, if two forces are going in the same direction and have equal magnitude, they are considered balanced. This means that they will cancel each other out, resulting in no net force acting on the object.
Two forces acting on a hanging object are tension, which is the force exerted by the string or rope holding the object up, and gravity, which is the force pulling the object downward towards the Earth.