| Abendaño - 1852 - 722 pages
...glass, and loaded so that one shall float, the other sink. Experiment. 1st. A heavy body when immersed is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced liquid. Place the receiver on the stand, fill it with water and draw out the latter until the point... | |
| William Guy Peck - 1859 - 368 pages
...they repel the water, heaping it up on each side, thus forming a cavity in the surface ; the needle is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid, and, when this exceeds the weight of the needle, it will float. It is on this principle that... | |
| Adolphe Ganot, William Guy Peck - 1871 - 510 pages
...the following principle, entirely analogous to the principle of When a body is plunged into a </«$, it is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of...lighter than the air which it displaces. It continues to vise until it reaches a stratum of air where its weight is just equal to that of the displaced air,... | |
| Adolphe Ganot, William Guy Peck - 1871 - 516 pages
...BALLOONING. Buoyant Effort of the Atmosphere. 14O. It has been shown that a body plunged into a liquid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced liquid. That a similar effect is produced upon a body in the atmosphere, may be shown by means of an... | |
| Edward Charles Pickering - 1873 - 240 pages
...glass, and loaded so that one shall float, the other sink. Experiment. 1st. A heavy body when immersed is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced liquid. Place the receiver on the stand, fill it with water and draw out the latter until the point... | |
| Sir George Greenhill - 1894 - 552 pages
...or partialty immersed in a Fluid or Fluids (not necessarily a single liquid), at rest under gravity, is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid, acting vertically upwards through the centre of gravity of the displaced fluid." To prove this... | |
| 1956 - 40 pages
...use of standards of mass is the buoyancy or lifting effect of the air. A body immersed in any fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid. Two bodies of equal mass, if placed one on each pan of an equal-arm balance, will balance each... | |
| Arthur Lalanne Kimball - 1911 - 710 pages
...or iron instead of the liquid. Therefore when any object is wholly or partially immersed in a liquid it is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced liquid, and the center of pressure is where the center of gravity of the submerged portion would be... | |
| George Arthur Hoadley - 1913 - 554 pages
...law is called the Principle of Archimedes. It may be stated as follows : A body immersed in a liquid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced liquid. This tendency of a liquid to lift a submerged body is called its buoyancy, and depends in amount... | |
| University of Aberdeen - 1915 - 944 pages
...corresponding to any faulty reading h is h + ^- -• o2 — ft 11. Prove that a body immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid, acting vertically upwards through the centre of gravity of the displaced fluid. Determine the... | |
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