what is Archimedes priciple explain in simple language
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when you immerse something in water the volume of the object immersed is equal to the volume of the water that is overflown.
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Archimedes' treatise, On floating bodies, proposition five states:
Any floating object displaces its own weight of fluid.
– Archimedes of Syracuse[3]
For more general objects, floating and sunken, and in gases as well as liquids (i.e. a fluid), Archimedes' principle may be stated thus in terms of forces:
Any object, wholly or partially immersed in a fluid, is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
– Archimedes of Syracuse
For a sunken object, the volume of displaced fluid is the volume of the object, and for a floating object on a liquid, the weight of the displaced liquid is the weight of the object.
Briefly: Buoyancy = weight of displaced fluid.
Any floating object displaces its own weight of fluid.
– Archimedes of Syracuse[3]
For more general objects, floating and sunken, and in gases as well as liquids (i.e. a fluid), Archimedes' principle may be stated thus in terms of forces:
Any object, wholly or partially immersed in a fluid, is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
– Archimedes of Syracuse
For a sunken object, the volume of displaced fluid is the volume of the object, and for a floating object on a liquid, the weight of the displaced liquid is the weight of the object.
Briefly: Buoyancy = weight of displaced fluid.
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