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buoyancy
It's all about density; figure out the density of the liquid and the density of the object. If the object is less dense than the liquid, it will float. It's a matter of buoyancy and Archimedes' principle.
If something has a density that is less than the density of the liquid it is in, it will float. Water has a density of 1 so anything with a density less than 1 will float.
There is a law of physics (Archimedes's principle)stating that the upward buoyant force exerted on an immersed object is equal to the weight of the fluid the object displaces.
Archimedes
buoyancy
buoyancy
Archimedes' Principle relates the weight of a fluid displaced to the object placed in the fluid. If the weight of the fluid displaced is less than the object's weight ,then the object sinks. When the weights of the object and displaced water are equal, the object will float.
Archimedes' Principle. It all depends on the buoyant force and the densities of the two objects.
Bouyant Force
A volume equal to its own weight (Archimedes' Principle).
What you are describing is Archimedes' principal. The reason it holds try is that the object will only float when the force of gravity pulling it down equals the force due to buoyancy. This happens once the body has displaced its mass worth of the fluid.
It's all about density; figure out the density of the liquid and the density of the object. If the object is less dense than the liquid, it will float. It's a matter of buoyancy and Archimedes' principle.
Archimedes
Archimedes.
If something has a density that is less than the density of the liquid it is in, it will float. Water has a density of 1 so anything with a density less than 1 will float.
There is a law of physics (Archimedes's principle)stating that the upward buoyant force exerted on an immersed object is equal to the weight of the fluid the object displaces.