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Pressure Variance With Depth
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[QUOTE="haruspex, post: 5377057, member: 334404"] Once the object is fully submerged, pressure acts all around it. It acts more at the bottom than at the top because the pressure is greater there, and this provides the buoyancy. But if you increase the pressure, e.g. by taking the object to greater depth, you increase the pressure equally all round it, so there is no net change to the buoyancy. Stick to Archimedes' principle. What does that tell you here? But it is not clear from the question whether we should consider the apple and water as incompressible. Or if they are compressible, which is more readily compressed. How would that change your answer? [/QUOTE]
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Pressure Variance With Depth
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