Buoyancy 2

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PROBLEM 1 A standard basketball (mass = 624 grams; 24.3 cm in diameter) is held fully under water.

Calculate the buoyant force and weight. When released, does the ball sink to the bottom or float to the surface? If it floats, what percentage of it is sticking out of the water? If it sinks, what is the normal force, FN with which it sits on the bottom of the pool? SOLUTION The weight of the ball is

(c) The volume of the cube itself is 0.001m, so the percentage under the surface is...

To calculate the buoyancy, we need the volume of displaced water, which is the volume of the ball because it is being held completely submerged.

This detailed calculation confirms our rule-of-thumb that the ratio of an object submerged is the same as the ratio of its density to that of the fluid in which it is immersed. This also confirms the old adage that when you see an iceberg floating in the ocean, it really is "just the tip of the iceberg." PROBLEM 3: You have a block of a mystery material, 12 cm long, 11 cm wide and 3.5 cm thick. Its mass is 1155 grams.

The buoyant force is equal to the weight of that volume of water.

That's a lot stronger than the 6.1N downward pull of gravity, so the ball will rise to the surface when released. The density of the ball is

which is 8.3% the density of water. The ball will therefore be floating with 8.3% of its volume below the level of the surface, and 91.7% sticking out of the water. PROBLEM 2. Water ice has a density of 0.91 g/cm, so it will float in liquid water. Imagine you have a cube of ice, 10 cm on a side. (a) What is the cube's weight? (b) What volume of liquid water must be displaced in order to support the floating cube? (c) How much of the cube is under the surface of the water?

(a) What is its density? 2.5 g/cm or 2500 kg/m (b) Will it float in a tank of water, or sink? It's more dense than the water, so it's gonna sink! (c) If it floats, what percentage of the object will be sticking out above the water? If it sinks, what will be the normal force it presses against the bottom of the tank? When the block sits on the bottom of the tank, there are 3 forces acting on it: gravity (a.k.a. weight, downwards), buoyancy (upwards) and the normal force (upwards). The block is in equilibrium (FNET=0) so the magnitude of upwards forces must equal the downwards force of gravity. In other words, Fg= FB+ FN The weight, Fg= m g = 1.155 kg * 9.8 N/kg = 11.3 N The buoyant force, FB= density of fluid * volume * g = 4.5 N Therefore, the normal force FN= 6.8 N (d) Repeat parts b and c, only instead of water, the tank is full of mercury. The object is less dense than mercury (13.6 g/cm), so the object will float in mercury. The ratio of their densities, is 2.5/13.6 = 0.18. So 18% of the object is below the surface of the mercury, meaning that 82% must be sticking up above the surface.
PROBLEM 4: A paperweight when weighed in air w = 6.9N. When completely immersed in water however, w in water = 4.3N. Find the volume of the paperweight. Solution: The paperweight weighs less in water than in air, because of the buoyant force FB of the water. The buoyant force points upward, while the weight points downward, leading to an effective weight in water of W in water = W FB. There is also a buoyant force when the paperweight is weighed in air, but it is negligibly small. Thus, from the given weights, we can obtain the buoyant force, which is the weight of the displaced water, according to Archimedes principle. From the weight of the displaced water and the density of water, we can obtain the volume of the water, which is also the volume of the completely immersed paperweight.

SOLUTION: (a) The cube's weight is

(b) The buoyant force must equal the cube's weight. Take the equation for buoyant force, solve it for Vdf, and plug in the numbers.

We have

According to Archimedes principle, the buoyant force is the weight of the displaced water, which is mg, where m is the mass of the displaced water. We can write the mass as the density times the volume or m = r V. Thus, for the buoyant force, we have

Solving for the volume and using r = 1.00 x 103 kg/m3 for the density of water, we find

PROBLEM 5: What is the buoyant force in N on a 3.2 m3 helium balloon in air at standard conditions? The density of air is 1.3 kg/m3. SOLUTION: Your equation for Buoyancy force is F = d*V*g. F = Buoyancy Force, d = density of the liquid or gas it is in , V = Volume of the object, g =9.8m/s^2. So for this case F = 1.3 * 3.2 * 9.8 = 40.768 N (Newtons)

PROBLEM 6: A standard basketball (mass = 624 grams; 24.3 cm in diameter) is held fully under water. Calculate the buoyant force and weight. When released, does the ball sink to the bottom or float to the surface? If it floats, what percentage of it is sticking out of the water? If it sinks, what is the normal force, FN with which it sits on the bottom of the pool?

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