The water around floating object's is a measure of that object's "Displacement". For the object to float the weight of displacement must equal the object's weight.
If the water around an object is of a greater weight than an object's displacement, then the object will sink.
The weight of an object is the result of the force of gravity acting on its mass. Objects with more mass have a greater amount of matter, which means there is a stronger gravitational force pulling on them, resulting in a greater weight.
I assume you mean "What happens if the weight of an object is greater than the weight of the water it displaces." If so, the answer is simple, it sinks. If an objects weighs less than the weight of the water it displaces, it floats.
weight is the effect of gravity acting on mass,the greater the mass the greater the effect on gravity will have on it therefore the greater the weight. eg. if the mass is 50kg and gravity is 10N the the weight is 500N,if the mass increases to 100kg the the weight would increase to 1000N
If the weight of an object is greater than its buoyant force, then it will not float - it will sink.
weight is the effect of gravity acting on mass,the greater the mass the greater the effect on gravity will have on it therefore the greater the weight. eg. if the mass is 50kg and gravity is 10N the the weight is 500N,if the mass increases to 100kg the the weight would increase to 1000N
No. They increase in weight.
Other things (the volume and shape) being equal, a greater weight would cause a greater terminal velocity.
It sinks
The object sinks.
you gain weight
Objects that weigh less exert less downward force due to gravity compared to objects that weigh more. Gravity acts on all objects equally, causing them to fall at the same rate regardless of weight. However, weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object's mass, so objects with more mass will have a greater weight and exert a greater force on a surface when supported.
The size of the difference threshold, also known as the just noticeable difference (JND), is greater for heavier objects because the increase in weight needs to be larger to notice a difference compared to lighter objects. This is due to differences in sensitivity and perception in relation to the weight of the objects.