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The mass of water expelled by the ship is more than the mass of the ship. Hence the buoyant force is more than the weight of the ship and so ship floats.
The basic reason that a ship floats is that the enclosed volume in the ship's hull is greater than the volume of water which has the same mass as the ship.
momentum is mass x velocity. Even though the car is moving ten times faster, the ship mass is hundreds of times more, so the ship has more momentum
No. The relationship between mass and displacement does. Think about ships and boats. If had a big block of steel with the same mass a cargo ship and put it in the water, then it would sink. The ship is shaped so that it displaces enough water to keep itself afloat. If you cut a hole in the bottom of the ship, and then weld that material the side of it, then you haven't changed the mass of it, but it will sink.
Because the volume of water it displaces weighs more than the ship. Archimedes principle says that the upwards force on the ship is equal to the weight (mass) of fluid displaced - so the ship floats
A ships mass is variable
The mass of water expelled by the ship is more than the mass of the ship. Hence the buoyant force is more than the weight of the ship and so ship floats.
the mass of the titanic was 4672 ft 6in.
'Shore leave' is when a crew member of a ship (space ship in Mass Effect) is given leave to remain on land rather than attend duties on the ship.
The basic reason that a ship floats is that the enclosed volume in the ship's hull is greater than the volume of water which has the same mass as the ship.
getting the formula of MA mass x acceleration
the ship requires the centre of mass to be as low possible and central so ballast is added. the higher it is, it is possible the ship may roll or be unstable. the centre of mass is always pulling down and the low friction of the water would allow the ship to roll.
momentum is mass x velocity. Even though the car is moving ten times faster, the ship mass is hundreds of times more, so the ship has more momentum
SSV Normandy SR1
The SSV Normandy in Mass Effect The Normandy SR-2 in Mass Effect 2 & 3
Displacement. The ship may weigh a lot, but it displaces its mass in water. It should not sink if designed right. Say Eureka.
Anything that has mass and occupies space is matter.