The pressure will get higher quicker than in water because there is a different density between the liquids, and because there is a higher density, the liquid will be heavier and would push on you more than the smaller density of water. if you would submerge deep in that liquid, you will explode at a lower distance from the surface than in water.
The hydrometer will float higher in glycerin than in gasoline because glycerin is denser than gasoline. The level to which the hydrometer floats indicates the density of the liquid it is submerged in.
Beaker B, which contains the denser liquid, will exert more pressure at the bottom compared to Beaker A filled with water, due to the greater density of the liquid. Consequently, if both beakers are identical in size and shape and filled to the same height, the pressure exerted by the liquid in Beaker B will be greater than that in Beaker A.
The boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid changes from a liquid to a gas. It is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid equals the atmospheric pressure. Substances with higher boiling points require more energy to convert from a liquid to a gas.
It will become liquid at approx 77 K at atmospheric pressure.
If you suck some air out of a straw, the remaining air in the straw will have to contract in volume in order to maintain the same pressure, which it will do because normal air pressure is still pressing on the liquid in which the straw is submerged. The contracting air will then draw up the liquid.
Yes, the density and volume of the liquid play a role in whether an object sinks or floats, not necessarily the depth of the liquid. If an object is denser than the liquid it is in, it will sink; if it is less dense, it will float. The depth of the liquid only adds pressure to objects submerged within it.
If you were submerged in a liquid more dense than water, the pressure would be correspondingly greater. The pressure due to a liquid is precisely equal to the product of weight density and depth. liquid pressure = weight density x depth. also the pressure a liquid exerts against the sides and bottom of a container depends on the density and the depth of the liquid.
Depth affects liquid pressure, which increases with depth due to the weight of the liquid above. Density influences the buoyancy of an object submerged in the liquid, with denser liquids providing greater buoyant force. Generally, liquids of higher density are more resistant to being displaced or mixed with other liquids.
It would float.
A manometer. Used to measure pressure.
The depth of the liquid and the density of the liquid are two factors that determine the pressure in a liquid. The pressure increases with depth due to the weight of the liquid above resulting in greater pressure. Additionally, denser liquids exert more pressure compared to less dense liquids at the same depth.
The coin would float.
chicken
It would be the same as the pressure in the liquid outside the tube at the open end- the deeper it is in the liquid, the higher the pressure.
"Irregular" is probably the answer being looked for here. It helps if the object is also denser than the liquid it's being submerged in..
it depends on the vapour pressure of the liquid
We say the liquid exerts pressure on the object.