Buoyant force occurs because when an object is immersed in a fluid, the fluid exerts an upward force on the object due to the pressure difference between the top and bottom of the object. This force is equal to the weight of the fluid that the object displaces, following Archimedes' principle.
Bouyant force
When a body is immersed in a liquid, the forces acting on it include buoyant force (upwards force due to displaced liquid), gravitational force (downwards force due to gravity), and drag force (resistance force due to the movement of the body through the liquid).
The upward bouyant force depends only on the weight of the displaced fluid. The NET force (object's weight - bouyant force) depends on the object's weight and will determine how fast it sinks.
The buoyant force is dependent on the density of the fluid, the volume of the object submerged in the fluid, and the acceleration due to gravity. The greater the density of the fluid or the volume of the object, the greater the buoyant force.
It's a vector, and I believe it always points upward.
bouyant force
Bouyant force
f=ma
The bouyant force is equal to the weight of the liquid displaced.
Bouyant Force
It sinks
it is added by the principle of science and the the eonomy is the bouyant force of the education
no, it depends on how dense the object is
Archimedes.
Density and weight d = m/v
The force applied by the liquid on the solid immersed in it is called bouyant force .one can experience this force by pushing a cork into a beaker of water.
The bouyant force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid the object displaces.