Home
Class 11
PHYSICS
Two vessels have the same base area but ...

Two vessels have the same base area but differnent shapes. The first vessel takes twice the vloume of water that the second vessel requires to fill up to a paricular common height . Is the force exerted by water on the base of the vessel the same in the two case? If so, why do the vessels filled with water to that same height give different reading on a weighting scale ?

Promotional Banner

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

Two vessels have the same base area but different shapes. The first vessel takes twice the volume of water that the second vessel requires to fill upto a particular common height. Is the force exerted by the water on the base of the vessel the same in the two cases? If so, why do the vessels filled with water to that same height give different readings on a weighing scale?

Two vessels have the same base area but different shapes. the first vessel takes twice the volume of water than the second, vessel requires to fill upto a particular common height. Is the force exerted by water on the base of the vessel the same in the two cases? If so, why do the vessel filled with water to that same height give differnt readings on a weighing scale?

Two vessels have the same base area but different shapes. The first vessel takes twice the volume of water that the second vessel requires to fill upto a particular common height. Is the force exerted by the water on the base of the vessel the same in the two cases ? If so, why do the vessels filled with water to thatsame height give different readings on a weighing scale ?

Two vessels have the same base area but different shapes . The first vessel takes twice the volume of water that the second vessel requires to fill upto a particular common height . Is the force exerted by the two water on the base of the vessel the same in the two cases ? If so , why do the vessels filled with water to that same height give different readings on a weighing scale ?

Two vessels have the same area but different shapes. The first shapes takes twice the volume of water that the second vessel requires to fill up to a particular common height? Is the force exerted by the water on the base of the vessel the same in the two cases? If so, why do the vessels filled with water to that same height give different readings on a weighing scale?