The dinosaurs knew that they could float, but the individual
credited with quantifying the effect is Archimedes.
Archimedes, a Greek mathematician and scientist, is credited with discovering the buoyant force while taking a bath. He realized that the upward force acting on an object immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
Archimedes, an ancient Greek mathematician, physicist, engineer, inventor, and astronomer, is credited with discovering the principle of buoyancy. According to legend, Archimedes made the discovery when he observed the water displaced by his body while taking a bath.
An example of buoyancy is when a boat floats on water because the weight of the water displaced by the boat is equal to the weight of the boat itself. This principle is explained by Archimedes' principle, which states that the upward buoyant force on an object immersed in a fluid is equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces.
Buoyant force. It is the upward force exerted by a fluid on an object submerged in it, which acts in the opposite direction to the force of gravity.
Several forces: # hydrogen bonding # bouyancy # surface tension # plus dynamic forces, depending on the circumstance.
The person who discovered the principle of buoyancy was Archimedes. In addition to being a physicist and mathematician, Archimedes was also an inventor, an astronomer, and an engineer.
bouyancy- force of weight of gas fluids.
He jumped out of the bath because he discovered the principle of bouyancy. He realized, when he sat down in the tub, that the amount of volume that is underwater, is the same as the volume of the water that is displaced.
Bouyancy determines whether an object sinks or floats.
The bouyancy of the vessel keeps it afloat. As long as the force of bouyancy is larger then the mass of the ship it will stay afloat.
same as archimedes' principle
An iceburg
because is a smart
bouyancy
'Bouyancy' is the ability of something to float.
because boaties can floatie
bouyancy density