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🌍Gravity vs Buoyancy🛟

Whether an object floats or sinks is a tug-of-war between two forces. Gravity drags it down; buoyancy lifts it up.

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🌍Gravity
  • A force that pulls objects toward Earth's center
  • Acts on all objects with mass, everywhere
  • Points downward, toward the planet
  • Proportional to an object's mass
  • Causes objects to fall and gives them weight
🛟Buoyancy
  • An upward force exerted by a surrounding fluid
  • Acts only on objects in a liquid or gas
  • Equals the weight of the fluid the object displaces
  • Points upward, opposing gravity
  • Determines whether an object floats or sinks

Verdict

Gravity always pulls down; buoyancy pushes up whenever an object sits in a fluid. If buoyancy is greater, the object floats; if gravity wins, it sinks. Archimedes' principle links the two.

Frequently asked

What is Archimedes' principle?+

It states that buoyant force equals the weight of the fluid an object displaces.

Why do some objects float?+

They float when the upward buoyant force is at least as large as the downward force of gravity.

Does buoyancy act in air?+

Yes. Air is a fluid, which is why helium balloons rise as buoyancy overcomes gravity.

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