Capillary action & osmotic pressure.
Water has the property of cohesion, which allows it to stick to surfaces through hydrogen bonding and capillary action, enabling it to move against gravity in plants and other structures.
Specific gravity is an intensive property. It does not depend on the amount of the substance present and remains constant regardless of the size of the sample.
Water's property of cohesion, due to hydrogen bonding between water molecules, allows it to climb against gravity in plants through a process called capillary action. This allows water to be drawn up from the roots through the xylem vessels to the leaves and other parts of the plant.
The weight of an object is the property affected by gravity. Weight is the force of gravity acting on an object's mass, causing it to be pulled towards the center of the Earth.
Mass is the property of matter on which gravity act upon.
Water has the property of cohesion, which allows it to stick to surfaces through hydrogen bonding and capillary action, enabling it to move against gravity in plants and other structures.
Yes, peristalsis will work against gravity.
Gravity is not well understood. It is a property of matter.
Specific gravity is an intensive property. It does not depend on the amount of the substance present and remains constant regardless of the size of the sample.
when it is in motion
Water's property of cohesion, due to hydrogen bonding between water molecules, allows it to climb against gravity in plants through a process called capillary action. This allows water to be drawn up from the roots through the xylem vessels to the leaves and other parts of the plant.
The weight of an object is the property affected by gravity. Weight is the force of gravity acting on an object's mass, causing it to be pulled towards the center of the Earth.
You're on to it! Gravity appears to be a property of mass. No mass - no gravity. But exactly what gravity is we don't yet know.
The property of matter that is not affected by gravity is mass. An object has the same mass regardless of the force of gravity, however it's weight can vary. Weight is the force of gravity acting on the mass of an object.
Mass is the property of matter on which gravity act upon.
Lift something against gravity and you're measuring its weight, which is the force acting on it due to gravity.
There is no such "property of water". ANY substance, gas, liquid, object, solid, or mass travels vertically upward ... "against the force of gravity" ... when a force greater than its weight acts on it in the upward direction. The statement applies to hot air, molasses, water, automobiles, airplanes, beach balls in swimming pools, and people with leg muscles.