Q. If a piece of wood is held under water, the upthrust on it will be__:
Answer: less than weight of the wood
Notes: According to the Archimedes’ principle, a floating object will experience an upthrust force from water, equal to the weight of water displaced. It will sink into the water until it reaches the point where the weight of the water pushed aside equals its own weight. For an object that is floating, the mass of the material equals the mass of water that is displaced by the object (1 kg = 1 L of water). Dense objects cannot displace enough water to provide an upthrust force to counterbalance their weight, so they plummet or sink below the surface. Objects made of material denser than water (e. g. a boat made of iron) can still float if they contain air so that the mean density is less than that of water. The upthrust is often called the loss in weight of the object. Upthrust = Apparent loss of weight of object = Weight in air - Weight in liquid.
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