There are generally 4 forces which affect an object. These are: - weight force - the force acting downwards on the object - normal reaction force - the force acting upwards on the object - driving force - the force pushing the object on the horizontal plane (ie. left/right) - friction force (including air resistance) - the force pushing the object in the opposite direction to the driving force
It is not the weight of the immersed object but the volume of the object would affect the buoyant force on the immersed object because the buoyant force is nothing but the weight of the displaced liquid whose volume is equal to that of the immersed object.
The force acting upon the object as well as the mass of the object. Both will affect the acceleration of the object.
A force can make a still object move. It can change its shape or size. It can change the way in which it is moving.
-- the object's mass -- the net force acting on it
Accelerates the motion of an object.
The force acting upon the object as well as the mass of the object. Both will affect the acceleration of the object.
There are generally 4 forces which affect an object. These are: - weight force - the force acting downwards on the object - normal reaction force - the force acting upwards on the object - driving force - the force pushing the object on the horizontal plane (ie. left/right) - friction force (including air resistance) - the force pushing the object in the opposite direction to the driving force
It is not the weight of the immersed object but the volume of the object would affect the buoyant force on the immersed object because the buoyant force is nothing but the weight of the displaced liquid whose volume is equal to that of the immersed object.
The force acting upon the object as well as the mass of the object. Both will affect the acceleration of the object.
It would cause the object to decelerate.
Newton's second law of motion covers this.The net force on an object accelerates the object.
A force can make a still object move. It can change its shape or size. It can change the way in which it is moving.
If the weight of the object is higher than the buoyant force the object SINKS. And the opposite happens if the weight is lower than the buoyant force. If it is equal, the object neither sink nor float, it is neutrally buoyant.
-- the object's mass -- the net force acting on it
A force is a push, pull, or dragging on an object that affects its motion. ... The action from a force can cause an object to accelerate, to decelerate, to stop or to change direction.
force, mass