Environmental Sciences, asked by sharadadhital2, 6 months ago

What are 2 differences between Pascal's law and Archimedes' Principle?

Answers

Answered by jagjeetkaur0408555
14

Answer:

Pascal's principle states that pressure increases by the same amount throughout an enclosed or confined fluid. ... Archimedes' principle states that the buoyant force acting on a submerged object is equal to the weight of the volume of fluid displaced by the object.

Answered by shilpa85475
7

The buoyant force acted on the object due to the surrounding fluid is known as the Archimedes Principle.

However, the pascal principle states that when a force is acted on a fluid, pressure increases equally to every part of the fluid. This is the Pascal Law.

The Archimedes principle can easily calculate the volume of an object that does not have a regular shape whereas, the pascal law is used in hydraulic lifts or hydraulic breaks.

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