Air is less denser than water is why the force meter readings lower in water. A force meter is a piece of equipment that is used to measure the different forces of the universe.
because air is more denser than water
air is less denser than water
Gravity
The force of gravity on the same on land and water.However, in water, there is an upward force of buoyancy which acts in an opposite direction to the force of gravity. Hence, in water, the total net force downward is lower.
Use Archimedes' Principle: the buoyancy force of a submerged (or partially submerged) object is the weight of the volume of water that the object displaces. In other words, find the volume of the object that is under water, and multiply that by the density of water (1000 kg/cubic meter) and gravity (9.8 meter/sec/sec).
When an object is placed in water it experiences Buoyancy force. The magnitude of force is equal to the weight of water displaced and direction is perpendicular to free surface. Buoyancy is felt due to unequal amount of forces on upper and lower surface of object. Buoyancy force will not be felt in space.. This is not true, it can be felt if the water container is accelerating.
There is a force called upthrust coming from the water. this pushes objects upwards, making the resultant force lower, which means they seem to weigh less.
In temperate zone away from water, in desert areas, and at higher altitudes.
Gravity
To test a calibrate TDS meter has a few steps. First lightly tap or stir the meter that will remove any air bubbles, wait ten to twenty seconds and read the stabilize, for more accuracy readings turn the meter off the meter after each reading and shake off all the water after every use.
The force of gravity on the same on land and water.However, in water, there is an upward force of buoyancy which acts in an opposite direction to the force of gravity. Hence, in water, the total net force downward is lower.
Because the air pressure is lower -therefore, less force is need for the water to become gaseous
Use Archimedes' Principle: the buoyancy force of a submerged (or partially submerged) object is the weight of the volume of water that the object displaces. In other words, find the volume of the object that is under water, and multiply that by the density of water (1000 kg/cubic meter) and gravity (9.8 meter/sec/sec).
First see if it will get hotter by adjusting the knob on the regulator or lower heater element. If that doesn't work check lower element operation with a meter.
Far too much ! I've recently switched to a water-meter (simply because my water-rates are much lower), and find I'm more self-conscious of the amount of water I'm using. EVERY new house built has a water meter - if every household was forced to have a meter - they would be more careful of the amount of water they use.
This is a lower kinetic energy.
release the plastic in water it will flow because bouyant force of water is greater than platic
A water meter is purchased at a plumbing wholesaler.
I just put an upper heating element in my Hotpoint 40 gal. hot water heater. In putting a meter on the element, I found that I had 200+ volts. When I put the meter on the lower element it didn't budge. Might I have a defective lower thermostat? What might be preventing the voltage to reach the lowere heating element? Thank you for your anticipated input