Displacement :D
Volume
Displacement. You have a beaker with a known amount of water. Put the object in. Subtract the current volume minus the starting volume (of water). The difference is the amount of water displaced, telling you the volume of the object.
You're fishing for the "buoyant force", but the wording of the question isquite unscientific.The force on the floating object is not equal to water. It's equal to theweight of the amount of water that is displaced.
For an object to float in water, it must displace the amount water equal to its own weight according to Archimedes.
No relationship at all. But there is a definite and direct relationship between theamount of water than an object displaces and the object's volume.
by submerging it into a glass of water that has measurement lines and taking the difference between the original amount of water and the water with the object in it.You would use water displacement to find the volume of an irregular object.
volume...wow that was my first real answer. thank you for that oppurtunity.
No, As long as you can see if the object is floating or sinking, then the amount of water does not matter
This height is called the altitude. It is the amount of distance between the object and the surface of water.
Displacement. You have a beaker with a known amount of water. Put the object in. Subtract the current volume minus the starting volume (of water). The difference is the amount of water displaced, telling you the volume of the object.
Use a measured water cylinder, drop in the object, the amount of water displaced represents the volume of the object
Use the water displacement method. The object is equal to the amount of water it displaces. :)
the amount of density
place an object in a container with a fluid and find the amount of water it displaced. then find the mass of the object. then multiply the mass by the amount of displaced water♪
You're fishing for the "buoyant force", but the wording of the question isquite unscientific.The force on the floating object is not equal to water. It's equal to theweight of the amount of water that is displaced.
If you have a jug of a certain amount of water I.e 100 ml, you gently place the irregular sized object into the water and all of the overflow of water represents the volume of the object
ethanol
They are exactly the same amount