The shape of a boat with a hull that displaces water creates buoyancy. When the boat sits in water, the displaced water exerts an equal and opposite force on the boat, pushing it upwards. This buoyant force allows the boat to float on the water's surface.
The force that is at work is gravity. If you are thinking of bouyancy, it is not a force.
Boats float due to the principle of buoyancy, which is the upward force exerted by water that opposes the weight of the boat. The shape and design of the boat help displace enough water to create buoyant force, allowing it to float.
A boat floats on water because of the principle of buoyancy. When a boat displaces water that is equal to its weight, the upward force of the water (buoyant force) is greater than the downward force (boat's weight), allowing the boat to float. Additionally, the shape of the boat hull is designed to displace water efficiently, contributing to its ability to float.
anything you want that can float. You can be creative.
A boat floats because of buoyant force, which is the upward force exerted by a fluid (water) on an object immersed in it. This force is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object, providing an upward force that counteracts the weight of the boat. As long as the buoyant force is greater than or equal to the weight of the boat, it will float.
A hollow boat made of plasticine will float because the overall density of the boat is lower than the density of water. The buoyant force acting on the boat is greater than its weight, allowing it to float on the water's surface.
The force that helps a boat float is buoyancy. Buoyancy is the upward force exerted by a fluid, such as water, that opposes the weight of an object placed in that fluid. This force allows the boat to stay afloat by displacing an amount of water equal to its weight.
A boat floats because it is less dense than the water it displaces. The upward force acting on the boat from the water is called buoyancy, which counteracts the force of gravity pulling the boat downward. As long as the weight of the boat is less than the weight of the water it displaces, the boat will float on the surface of the water.
Without gravity, a boat wouldn't be able to float on water, so yes, gravity allows a boat to float (as well as sink into) water. A boat floats from buoyancy force. The buoyancy force is from the volume of water it displaces with it's shape below the water. The buoyancy force is equal to the volume of water it displaces multiplied by 62.4 lbs. per cubic foot (the density of water). So if the boat displaces 20 cubic feet of water with it's hull or shape it can hold 20 x 62.4 = 1248 lbs. of self weight plus cargo. Obviously there should be a factor of safety on that. In summary, a boat needs two things to float on water: Gravity and buoyancy force. Gravity keeps the boat on the water in the first place, but the buoyancy force is the actual thing that keeps the boat afloat. Technically, it is the buoyancy force that allows a boat to float, but if you want to get really technical, it is gravity in the first place that allows a boat to float on water.
The key to make a boat float is that the boat should weigh less (or have less mass) than the water it displaces.
The heavier the boat is loaded, the deeper in the water the boat will float.