Since the weight of pumice is less it will float on water for some time and then..
Splash for little rock. SPLOOSH for big rock.
After you dropped a rock in a cup of water you noticed some displacement of the water on the counter.
It ultimately turns into heat.
The displacement and velocity of a rock that is dropped from rest after 4s, is 6 km/h. This can vary depending on the speed of the rock, and the surroundings.
first goes air, space,rock and water there u go enjoy! its defineatley correct
As the water molecules from the ocean move in different ways, you can hear the various vibrations of soundwaves emitting from the friction of the molecules against themselves and the sand/rock/etc.
After you dropped a rock in a cup of water you noticed some displacement of the water on the counter.
splash
Yes, the potential for sound is made by the energy of the impact - (sound will occur in the hammer and in the rock), BUT the sound never leaves the hammer/rock as there is no air in space though which the sound waves can propagate.
It depends what the weight reading was originally measuring. If it was measuring the weight of the experimenter and the rock they were holding, and the water is not being held by them, then the weight will decrease by the weight of the rock. If it was measuring the weight of the water into which the rock it dropped, then it will increase by the weight of the rock. If it was measuring the weight of something totally unrelated to the experiment, then dropping the rock will have no measurable effect on the reading of the weight. Context needs to be given for the weight reading for a proper answer to be given.
A rock being stuck in it
Imagine a pool of water. If you dropped a rock in the water you would cause ripples that would travel out evenly in all directions. When one of those ripples hits a wall, you can see that the ripple bounces off the wall. Sound works the same way. Sound is basically just ripples in the air (vibrations). When a sound vibration hits a wall it bounces back much like the ripples in water.
It ultimately turns into heat.
Sit on a rock and ponder the meaning of life.
yeah, Frankie Jonas was in camp rock 2. he was the boy with the video camera which Kevin dropped in the water :)
The heat and pressure of the water can make cracks in the rock then break the rock.
Imagine a pool of water. If you dropped a rock in the water you would cause ripples that would travel out evenly in all directions. When one of those ripples hits a wall, you can see that the ripple bounces off the wall. Sound works the same way. Sound is basically just ripples in the air (vibrations). When a sound vibration hits a wall it bounces back much like the ripples in water. * When you hit something and waves travel through the air to your ears. Sometimes sound reflects again.
Sound can travel through water, metal, rock and air, so the atmosphere isn't strictly needed for sound transmission.