It is average density.
Buoyancy is a physical change, not a chemical change. It results from the relationship between an object's density and the density of the fluid it is placed in, causing the object to either float or sink.
A neutral pith ball is still "charged", it just doesn't display excessively charged behavior. Since it is neutral, having nearly equal positive and negative charge, the proximity of the positively charged pith ball still attracts the negative charge present in the ball, inducing polarization moving the ball closer to the positively charged one. Once they make contact, the conductibility of the pith ball quickly accepts excess charge from the other, creating a like charge repulsion.
An induced charge is created when a charged object is brought near a neutral object, causing the charges within the neutral object to rearrange due to the influence of the external charged object. This redistribution of charges results in one side of the neutral object becoming oppositely charged, leading to the creation of induced charges.
None. That said, most neutral objects we meet in everyday life are composed of positively and negatively charged objects which simply cancel out to give an overall neutral object. This is important because they can create Van der Waal forces, since the positive is a bit stronger than the negative in some areas very close to the object, and vice versa.
Some neutral objects have a weak dipole force where electron distribution is random across the whole object, and at any one given time, one side may be slightly more positive than the other. This attraction is very weak but it happens frequently especially in solutions.
The two main types of buoyancy are positive buoyancy, which causes an object to float, and negative buoyancy, which causes an object to sink. Another type, neutral buoyancy, occurs when an object neither sinks nor floats but remains suspended in water at a specific depth.
Three types of buoyancy are positive buoyancy, negative buoyancy, and neutral buoyancy. Positive buoyancy occurs when an object is lighter than the fluid it displaces, causing it to float. Negative buoyancy happens when an object is heavier than the fluid it displaces, causing it to sink. Neutral buoyancy is when an object has the same density as the fluid it displaces, resulting in it neither sinking nor floating.
Neutral buoyancy refers to the state of an object in a fluid where the buoyant force acting on the object is equal to the gravitational force pulling it down, resulting in the object neither sinking nor floating to the surface. This allows the object to remain suspended at a specific depth in the fluid.
For an object to have neutral buoyancy, its density must be equal to the density of the fluid it is immersed in. This means that the weight of the fluid displaced by the object is equal to the weight of the object itself, resulting in no net force acting on the object, allowing it to remain suspended in the fluid.
Positive buoyancy . . .When the object is completely submerged, the net force on it ... the combinationof gravity down and buoyancy up ... is upward, so the object tries to rise.Negative buoyancy . . .When the object is completely submerged, the net force on it ... the combinationof gravity down and buoyancy up ... is downward, so the object tries to sink.Neutral buoyancy . . .When the object is completely submerged, the net force on it ... the combinationof gravity down and buoyancy up ... is zero. The object stays at whatever depthit is released, without rising or sinking.
"buoyancy"
I am pretty sure its neutral buoyancy.
It is when the object neither sinks nor conpleatly floats on top of the surface it stays in the middle kind of what a submarine does
To get an object to neither sink nor float, you need to adjust its density to match that of the surrounding fluid. This can be achieved by creating a neutral buoyancy state through careful balance of the object's weight and the displacement of the fluid it's in. This is often achieved in neutral buoyancy tanks used for training astronauts or in the design of submarines and submersibles.
Induction is the process where an object becomes charged by placing another charged object near it. When a charged object is brought close to a neutral object, the charges in the neutral object redistribute, causing it to become charged.
If the buoyant force equals the object's weight, the object will float at a constant level in the fluid. This is known as neutral buoyancy. The object will neither sink nor rise in the fluid.
Negative buoyancy is when an object weighs more than the weight of the fluid it displaces, causing it to sink. In the case of a blimp, negative buoyancy can prevent it from floating in the air and instead cause it to descend. This can be counteracted by adjusting the blimp's ballast or level of helium to achieve neutral or positive buoyancy.