To determine the surface charge density of an object, you can divide the total charge on the object by its surface area. This will give you the amount of charge per unit area on the object's surface.
Surface charge density and volume charge density are related in a given system by the equation: surface charge density volume charge density thickness of the system. This means that the amount of charge distributed on the surface of an object is directly proportional to the volume charge density within the object and the thickness of the object.
The surface charge density will remain constant at 30 nC/cm^2 even if the radius of the disk is doubled. Surface charge density is independent of the size of the object and depends only on the distribution of charge over its surface area.
No. The key to whether an object floats or sinks is the average density, i.e., mass divided by volume. Also, whether an object will float or not also strictly depends on the surface volume. A piece of tin foil shaped into a boat will float and the same mass of tin foil shaped into a crumpled up ball will not float.
Density is the mass of an object divided by its volume. Without knowing the volume of the object, we cannot determine its density.
An object will float in water if its density is less than the density of water. If the object is denser than water, it will sink.
Surface charge density and volume charge density are related in a given system by the equation: surface charge density volume charge density thickness of the system. This means that the amount of charge distributed on the surface of an object is directly proportional to the volume charge density within the object and the thickness of the object.
The surface charge density will remain constant at 30 nC/cm^2 even if the radius of the disk is doubled. Surface charge density is independent of the size of the object and depends only on the distribution of charge over its surface area.
The mass divided my the volume determine the density of an object
The formula for density is an object's mass, divided by its volume. If you have both those quantities, you can determine the object's density.
Mass = Density Volume
No. The key to whether an object floats or sinks is the average density, i.e., mass divided by volume. Also, whether an object will float or not also strictly depends on the surface volume. A piece of tin foil shaped into a boat will float and the same mass of tin foil shaped into a crumpled up ball will not float.
Density is the mass of an object divided by its volume. Without knowing the volume of the object, we cannot determine its density.
density=mass divide by volume
green
it is not a part it is the bouancy of the material
When you have the density of both the object and the fluid, just see which has a higher density. If the object has a higher density than the fluid, the object will sink. If the object has a lower density than the fluid, the object will float.
The density of the object (mass/volume) compared to the density of the liquid.