If in shallow water, the plants that grow on the bottom, but if on deep water, on floating algae.
The pressure at the top of the container will also increase if the pressure at the bottom is increased. This is because pressure in a fluid increases with depth due to the weight of the fluid above creating a greater force pushing down.
The upward force exerted by a liquid or gas on an object immersed in it is called buoyant force. This force is a result of the pressure difference between the top and bottom of the object, and it opposes the weight of the object, causing it to float or rise.
Most of the liquid in a thermometer is typically found in the bulb at the bottom of the thermometer. This is where the temperature changes cause the liquid to expand or contract, moving up or down the tube to indicate the temperature.
Depending on many different conditions the temperature on the ground during a thunderstorm can be well below freezing (<32F) to over 100F. Inside the thunderhead clouds themselves the temperature at the bottom is above freezing but at the top the temperature is often well below freezing.
The force that acts on objects immersed in or floating on a liquid is called buoyant force. This force is exerted in the opposite direction of gravity and is a result of the pressure difference between the top and bottom of the object. Bouyant force is what causes objects to float in liquids.
ANSWER:Yes they are. See the related link for more information on this.
At the bottom of the waterfall.
The lowest two pairs are known as floating ribs.
The Aztecs created Chinampas, or floating gardens, to increase their farmlands. They dredged the lake to drag up the fertile soil from the lake bottom and placed it in floating flats that they used to grow plants on. They were tied down and could be moved if necessary.
Unlike almost all comparable mixtures, the ice is floating. In almost any other mixture, the ice would sink to the bottom.
Fish do not normally "float around" they swim. If your fish is floating/sinking then it is probably dead.
I fixed the spelling of your question!
the sea is technically floating on the earth, as at the bottom of the sea there are techtonic plates.. Our oceans are just gigantic canyons that are filled to the brim with water.
The four ribs at the bottom of the rib cage are called floating ribs because they are not directly attached to the sternum. They are known as ribs 11 and 12, with rib 11 being the first of the floating ribs and rib 12 being the last.
No, an object that is more dense than the fluid it's immersed in will sink to the bottom. Objects float when they are less dense than the fluid they displace, allowing them to be buoyant and stay on the surface.
The upthrust will decrease when an immersed body is slightly raised from the bottom of a beaker with a string, as the body is displacing less fluid and therefore experiencing less buoyant force. The weight of the body remains constant because it depends on the mass of the body, which does not change in this scenario.