The most common liquid (on our world) is water, and moving water is commonly found in rivers. It moves in oceans as well, in the form of waves and currents. It also moves out of faucets. Falling rain is another form of moving liquid.
One of the slowest moving liquids it asphalt. It took 69 year to drip ONCE.
No, the transfer of heat by moving liquid or gas is called convection. Conduction is the transfer of heat through a material without the movement of the material itself.
"What is the force exerted by a still liquid on an immersed non-moving object called? -- PressureOtherwise, if the object is moving, one could also have "shear forces".
Viscous drag in a liquid refers to the resistance force experienced by an object moving through the liquid due to the viscosity of the fluid. It is caused by the interaction between the moving object and the fluid molecules, which create a frictional force that opposes the motion of the object.
A liquid with higher viscosity has more resistance to flow due to the stronger intermolecular forces between its molecules. This results in slower movement of the liquid compared to a less viscous liquid.
Meltwater
a liquid is able to flow because its freely moving particles allow liquid to flow from place to place
Condensation is water moving from a gas to a liquid state
For an object moving through the liquid or gas that force is drag.
One of the slowest moving liquids it asphalt. It took 69 year to drip ONCE.
lemon juice and water The two liquids in a lava lamp.
liquid
water vapor or vapor
It's Melting, the molecules are moving therefore we have a liquid.
The molecules in a solid vibrate in place. The molecules of a liquid are moving about.
No, the transfer of heat by moving liquid or gas is called convection. Conduction is the transfer of heat through a material without the movement of the material itself.
If the liquid is static or moving with a constant velocity, then liquid pressure at a particular level is constant.In case the liquid is in accelerated motion we will get variation in the liquid pressure at a particular level