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  1. Buoyant definition: Having or marked by buoyancy. Origin of Buoyant Spanish boyante present participle of boyar to refloat a boat from boya buoy from Old French boue buoy. From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

  2. FB = wfl, F B = w fl, where FB F B is the buoyant force and wfl w fl is the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. This principle is named after the Greek mathematician and inventor Archimedes (ca. 287–212 BCE), who stated this principle long before concepts of force were well established. Figure 14.21 (a) An object submerged in a fluid ...

  3. Buoyancy, tendency of an object to float or to rise in a fluid when submerged. This fluid can be either a liquid or a gas. A popular story suggests that the concept of buoyancy was discovered by the Greek mathematician Archimedes while he was taking a bath. He knew that some materials floated in.

  4. Feb 3, 2023 · Loss of the object’s weight = Weight of the displaced liquid. This loss of weight is the thrust or buoyant force ( Fb ). Therefore, Buoyant Force Formula: Fb = r X g X V. Unit of Buoyant Force: Newton or N. This equation is also called the law of buoyancy. It gives a relationship between buoyancy and density.

  5. buoyant - WordReference English dictionary, questions, discussion and forums. All Free.

  6. traducir BUOYANT: flotante, boyante, optimista, fuerte, alcista, flotante. Más información en el diccionario inglés-español.

  7. Buoyancy (also known as the buoyant force) is the force exerted on an object that is wholly or partly immersed in a fluid. The symbol for the magnitude of buoyancy is B or FB. As a vector it must be stated with both magnitude and direction. Buoyancy acts upward for the kind of situations encountered in everyday experience.

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