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Buoyancy provides an upward force on the object(like floating). The magnitude of this force is equal to the [[weight]] of the displaced fluid. (''[[Displacement (fluid)|Displacement]]'' is the term used for the weight of the displaced fluid and, thus, is an equivalent term to buoyancy.) The buoyancy of an object depends, therefore, only upon two factors: the object's [[volume]], and the [[density]] of the surrounding fluid. The greater the object's volume and surrounding density of the fluid, the more buoyant force it will experience. If the buoyancy of an (unrestrained and unpowered) object exceeds its weight, it will tend to rise. An object whose weight exceeds its buoyancy will tend to sink.
Buoyancy provides an upward force on the object(like floating). The magnitude of this force is equal to the [[weight]] of the displaced fluid. (''[[Displacement (fluid)|Displacement]]'' is the term used for the weight of the displaced fluid and, thus, is an equivalent term to buoyancy.) The buoyancy of an object depends, therefore, only upon two factors: the object's [[volume]], and the [[density]] of the surrounding fluid. The greater the object's volume and surrounding density of the fluid, the more buoyant force it will experience. If the buoyancy of an (unrestrained and unpowered) object exceeds its weight, it will tend to rise. An object whose weight exceeds its buoyancy will tend to sink.


The atmosphere's density depends upon altitude. As an [[airship]] rises in the atmosphere, therefore, its buoyancy reduces as the density of the surrounding air reduces. The density of water is essentially constant: as a [[submarine]] expels water from its buoyancy tanks (by pumping them full of air) it rises because its buoyancy stays the same (because the volume of water it displaces stays the same) while its weight is decreased.
The atmosphere's density depends upon altitude. As an [[airship]] rises in the atmosphere, therefore, its buoyancy reduces as the density of the surrounding air reduces. The density of water is essentially constant: as a [[submarine]] expels water from its buoyancy tanks (by pumping them full of air) it risesHOLY BALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLZZZZZZZZBITCH because its buoyancy stays the same (because the volume of water it displaces stays the same) while its weight is decreased.


As a floating object rises or falls the forces external to it change and, as all objects are compressible to some extent or another, so will the object's volume. Buoyancy depends on volume and so an object's buoyancy reduces if it is compressed and increases if it expands.
As a floating object rises or falls the forces external to it change and, as all objects are compressible to some extent or another, so will the object's volume. Buoyancy depends on volume and so an object's buoyancy reduces if it is compressed and increases if it expands.

Revision as of 17:01, 30 March 2007

In physics, buoyancy is the upward force on an object produced by the surrounding fluid (i.e., a liquid or a gas) in which it is fully or partially immersed, due to the pressure difference of the fluid between the top and bottom of the object. The net upward buoyancy force is equal to the magnitude of the weight of fluid displaced by the body. This force enables the object to float or at least to seem lighter. Buoyancy is important for many vehicles such as boats, ships, balloons, and airships.

Forces and equilibrium

Buoyancy provides an upward force on the object(like floating). The magnitude of this force is equal to the weight of the displaced fluid. (Displacement is the term used for the weight of the displaced fluid and, thus, is an equivalent term to buoyancy.) The buoyancy of an object depends, therefore, only upon two factors: the object's volume, and the density of the surrounding fluid. The greater the object's volume and surrounding density of the fluid, the more buoyant force it will experience. If the buoyancy of an (unrestrained and unpowered) object exceeds its weight, it will tend to rise. An object whose weight exceeds its buoyancy will tend to sink.

The atmosphere's density depends upon altitude. As an airship rises in the atmosphere, therefore, its buoyancy reduces as the density of the surrounding air reduces. The density of water is essentially constant: as a submarine expels water from its buoyancy tanks (by pumping them full of air) it risesHOLY BALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLZZZZZZZZBITCH because its buoyancy stays the same (because the volume of water it displaces stays the same) while its weight is decreased.

As a floating object rises or falls the forces external to it change and, as all objects are compressible to some extent or another, so will the object's volume. Buoyancy depends on volume and so an object's buoyancy reduces if it is compressed and increases if it expands.

If an object's compressibility is less than that of the surrounding fluid, it is in stable equilibrium and will, indeed, remain at rest, but if its compressibility is greater, its equilibrium is unstable, and it will rise and expand on the slightest upward perturbation, or fall and compress on the slightest downward perturbation.

A submarine is more compressible than the surrounding water.[citation needed] As depth increases, the resulting pressure causes the submarine's volume to decrease more than the volume of the surrounding water decreases. Buoyancy depends upon the object's volume and the weight of the displaced fluid. Volume has decreased so the weight displaced has decreased which means a decrease in buoyancy and the submarine tends to sink further. A rising submarine expands more than the surrounding water, the submarine tends to rise further.

The height of a balloon tends to be stable. As a balloon rises it will tend to increase in volume with reducing atmospheric pressure. But the balloon's cargo will not expand. The average density of the balloon decreases less, therefore, than that of the surrounding air. The balloon's buoyancy reduces because the weight of the displaced air is reduced. A rising balloon tends to stop rising. Similarly a sinking balloon tends to stop sinking.

The buoyant force can be expressed using the following equation:

where


is the density of the fluid;
V is the volume of the object submerged;
g is the standard gravity ( 9.81 N/kg on Earth). Negative sign must be used since the buoyancy is opposite in direction with the acceleration due to gravity.

Archimedes' principle

Archimedes' principle, or the law of upthrust, is:

The rule that the weight of fluid that a submerged object displaces is the same amount of buoyancy force applied to the submerged object..

It is named after Archimedes of Syracuse, who first discovered this law. Vitruvius (De architectura IX.9–12) recounts the famous story of Archimedes making this discovery while in the bath (for which see eureka) but the actual record of Archimedes' discoveries appears in his two-volume work, On Floating Bodies. The ancient Chinese child prodigy Cao Chong also applied the principle of buoyancy in order to measure the accurate weight of an elephant, as described in the Sanguo Zhi.

The weight of the displaced fluid is directly proportional to the volume of the displaced fluid (specifically if the surrounding fluid is of uniform density). Thus, among objects with equal masses, the one with greater volume has greater buoyancy.

Suppose a rock's weight is measured as 10 newtons when suspended by a string in a vacuum. Suppose that when the rock is lowered by the string into water, it displaces water of weight 3 newtons. The force it then exerts on the string from which it hangs will be 10 newtons minus the 3 newtons of buoyant force: 10 − 3 = 7 newtons. This same principle even reduces the apparent weight of objects that have sunk completely to the sea floor, such as the sunken battleship USS Arizona at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.

The density of the immersed object relative to the density of the fluid is easily calculated without measuring any volumes:

Density

If the weight of an object is less than the weight of the fluid the object would displace if it were fully submerged, then the object has an average density less than the fluid and has a buoyancy greater than its weight. If the fluid has a surface, such as water in a lake or the sea, the object will float at a level so it displaces the same weight of fluid as the weight of the object. If the object is immersed in the fluid, such as a submerged submarine or a balloon in the air, it will tend to rise.

If the object has exactly the same density as the liquid, then its buoyancy equals its weight. It will tend neither to sink nor float.

An object with a higher average density than the fluid has less buoyancy than weight and it will sink.

A ship floats because although it is made of steel, which is more dense than water, it encloses a volume of air and the resulting shape has an average density less than that of the water.

Applications

See also

External links