Physics, asked by niveditapatra02, 9 months ago

All bodies are buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of air they displace.
Why, then, don't all objects float like this balloon?

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Answered by stvkurijhzheamjaxn
1

Answer:

Did you mean: All bodies are buried up by a force equal to the weight of air they displace. Why, then, don't all objects float like this balloon?

All bodies are buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of air they displace. Why, then, don't all objects float like this balloon?

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सभी निकायों एक बल से गति उत्साहित कर रहे हैं हवा के वजन वे विस्थापित क्यों तो सभी वस्तुओं डॉन टी के बराबर इस गुब्बारे की तरह तैरने लगते हैं

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Archimedes' principle, principle that states that a body immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid. ... It explains not only the buoyancy of ships and other vessels in water but also the rise of a balloon in the air and the apparent loss of weight of objects underwater

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