Density and Pressure in Liquids

 
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Density measures how squished up the matter is, 
not
 how heavy it is
 
Eg. A feather quilt may be heavier than a metal spoon, but the spoon is
more dense than the quilt.
Only if you have equal sizes (ie. volumes) of two materials, are their
relative densities directly related to their weight.
A little more on density…
 
Some densities:
Osmium  (bluish-white metal) is the densest substance on earth.
It’s an element (atomic # 76), whose crystalline form has very
closely packed atoms. Density 22.6 g/cm
3
.
    Used e.g. in fountain pen tips, electrical contacts, where extreme
durability/hardness needed.
 
Water has density 1 g/cm
3
 
Ice has less density, 0.92 g/cm
3
, because when water freezes, it
expands.
 
Seawater has greater density, 1.03 g/cm
3
.
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Which has greater density, 1 liter of water or 1 liter of ice?
And which weighs more?
A)
The water has greater density and weighs more
B)
 The water has greater density but weighs less
C)
 The water has less density but weighs more
D)
 The water has less density and weighs less
 
Answer: A
Any
 amount of water has greater density than 
any
 amount of ice (it doesn’t
depend on amount, since density is the ratio of mass to volume).
Since water has greater density, it weighs more than an equal volume of ice.
Pressure
Why does it hurt so much more when a thumbtack pin is pressed
into your hand than when a marble is, pressing equally hard ??
 
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So, define
 
 
Question:
 Why is a bed-ridden person less likely to develop bedsores on
their bodies if they use a waterbed rather than an ordinary (i.e. more rigid)
mattress?
 
Because more of the body is in contact with the supporting surface on
the waterbed than on the mattress, so there is less bodyweight
pressure. (Larger area in eqn above, same force, so less pressure)
Pressure in a liquid
 
A liquid is composed of molecules that move constantly and bounce off the
sides of the container it is in and or bounce off objects (like a swimmer) in
the liquid.
Bouncing creates a force (recall momentum-impulse) – hence a pressure.
 
= weight density x depth
 
Pressure in a liquid: dependence on depth.
 
 
Pressure at a point twice as deep, is twice as much.
 
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Go deeper - you feel more pressure (e.g. in your ears). The deeper you
go, the more weight of water is above you, so more pressure you feel.
 
  
It does 
not 
depend on the volume, only on the 
depth
 Eg. Same water pressure felt when swimming 2m deep in a backyard
pool than when swimming 2m deep in a huge freshwater lake.
 
Eg.
 Different shaped vases all connected – the level of the water in each is
the same. Why?
 
Because, if not, the pressure would be more at the bottom of the vase with higher
water level (from eqn, larger depth). This increased pressure would then force
water sideways to lower pressure, and then up the vase with lower level.
Eventually pressures equalize – which means same water level in each.
 
This gives rise to the saying 
water “seeks it’s own level”.
 
Eg.
 Hold a garden hose filled with water, and hold both ends at same height,
water stays. Now if raise one end, water flows out lower end, even through an
“uphill” path.
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Answer: B
 The pressure at the bottom of the small but deep pond
here is twice as great as the pressure at the bottom
of the large shallow lake.
There is more pressure felt
by a swimmer at the
bottom of
A)
The large but shallow lake
B)
The small but deep pond
C)
Same for both
Pressure in liquid: density dependence
 
If liquid is twice as dense, the liquid pressure is also
twice as much.
 
Eg. Saltwater is more dense than fresh water (see earlier slide on
density). So saltwater has more liquid pressure (makes it easier to
float in the ocean than in a freshwater lake…see shortly for more on
floating).
 
Liquids are very difficult to compress – so even for a large body of
liquid, the 
density
 is practically the same at all depths.
Liquid Pressure = weight density x depth
Recall:
Liquid Pressure: Direction
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Eg Swimming underwater, pressure on eardrum is same if tilt
head in any direction.
 
Eg. Water spurts 
sideways
 from holes in the side
 
Eg. Boat on water – water pressure acts 
upward 
on the boat surface
 
 Although force has direction, pressure does 
not
 (it’s a scalar)
 
At any point on the triangular block shown,  force from
bouncing molecules are in all directions, but only that
normal to the surface doesn’t get cancelled out. 
Net
force is normal (perpendicular) to (any) surface.
Buoyancy
Buoyant force = upward force acting on an object in liquid
, due to pressure
on lower part of object being higher than pressure on upper part
:
 
Question:
 If there’s an upward buoyant force on a submerged object, then how
come it doesn’t accelerate upwards (N’s 2
nd
 law) ??
 
There are also other forces acting – gravitational force and water resistance.  Whether
it accelerates or not, and in which direction (up or down), depends on how these
balance.
Eg. if push a light ball under water, it accelerates up once you let go due to buoyant
force being dominant.
But if you push a boulder under water, it will sink, as weight (grav force) is larger than
the buoyant force.
Displacement: towards Archimedes principle
First we need the concept of “
volume of water displaced
A completely submerged object always displaces a 
volume 
of liquid equal
to its own volume:
 
If have container full of water, and then add a
rock:
Volume of water dripped out = volume of rock.
Regardless of weight of rock – eg. a 1-liter
container of milk and a 1-liter container of air
submerged in water, both displace the same
amount of water.
 
If container is big:
 then increase in volume level = volume of rock
Aside:
 Archimedes and the King’s Crown
 
 
This concept of displacement of water is really useful if you want to measure the
volume of odd-shaped objects.
 
 There is a story of how Archimedes (circa 250 BC) discovered this.
King Hiero II had given a goldsmith a lump of pure gold of a certain weight to make
him an elaborate crown. He then wanted to verify that the goldsmith did in fact use
all the gold, and didn’t substitute part of a cheaper metal like silver, taking some of
the gold for himself instead. How to determine this without destroying the crown?
 
 
Can measure that the
crown and gold ingot
have the same weight.
 
When put in water, the king’s
crown displaced 
more
 water than
the gold ingot 
 larger volume 
lower density, i.e. not pure gold
 
While taking a bath, Archimedes realized when an object is put in water, the water
level rises an amount equal to the object’s volume (displacement principle).  So:
 
Buoyancy: Archimedes’ Principle
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Applies to liquids and gases
 Applies  to either partially submerged objects or fully submerged objects
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Eg. What is the buoyant force on a 1-liter container of anything in water
so that just 
half 
of it is in the water?
 
Same volume, 0.5-liter, of water is displaced, so the buoyant
force on it is the weight of 0.5-liters of water = 0.5 x 9.8 N = 4.9 N.
 
If fully submerged, the buoyant force is greater – equal to 9.8 N  in the case
of (any) 1-liter object.
More on Archimedes Principle
 
For a fully submerged object, the 
buoyant
force is 
independent of depth
, even though
the pressure depends on depth:
 
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Because of the buoyant force, apparent weight in water is less than
weight in air:
 
Here, the 3N object displaces
an amount of water weighing
2N = buoyant force.
So its weight in water is
reduced to 1N.
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Upon which is the buoyant force larger – a fish that has eaten a huge
meal, or its hungry identical twin? (Assume that the full fish holds
its tummy in so that its volume is the same but its mass and
density are greater).
A)
The fish who had its meal
B)
The hungry twin
C)
Same for both
 
Answer: C
The buoyant force is the same on each, since both fish have same
volume so displace the same amount of water.
 
 
Very Important!!!
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Eg. A small steel ball experiences less upward buoyant force than a
large styrofoam ball. The steel ball sinks because its downward
gravitational force is much bigger –
 
Sink or float depends on the objects weight as well – next slide..
Sinking vs Floating
Depends on whether object’s weight is greater (sink) or less (float)
than buoyant force.
 
Since weight = weight density x volume, and
buoyant force = fluid density x volume, then sinking vs floating depends
on the 
relative density
 of the object to fluid:
(i)
If object denser than fluid, it will sink
(ii)
If object less dense than fluid, it will float
(iii)
If same density, then it will neither sink nor float.
 
Eg. If you are very muscular, it’s hard for you to float in water, as you are
too dense! Taking a huge breath to inflate your lungs could help to
reduce your average density temporarily, or wear a life jacket – this
increases your volume but decreases average density since it is so light.
 
Example:
 Fish normally have about the same density as water (so
neither sink nor float). They have an air sac that they can contract or
expand.
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To move up, want to increase buoyant force, so decrease
density. Since density = mass/volume, this means increasing volume
by expanding the air sac would make fish move up.
To move down, contract air sac.
 
Another point about the buoyant force:
Something that may sink in water, may float in salt water (more dense), or in
mercury (even more dense).
Why?
 Because denser fluids have more weight for same volume displaced,
so greater buoyant force.
Hence, easier to float in ocean’s seawater than freshwater pool (recall
earlier). And, iron floats in mercury but sinks in water…
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Consider holding a ping-pong ball and a golf ball of the same size
under water. Then release them both. The ping-pong ball will rise
to the surface whereas the golf-ball will fall. Why?
A)
The buoyant force is smaller on the golf ball than on the ping-
pong ball.
B)
Both the buoyant force and the gravitational force are larger on
the golf ball than on the ping-pong ball due to its greater mass.
C)
The buoyant force is the same on both balls but less than the
gravitational force for the golf ball and larger than the gravitational
force for the ping-pong ball.
D)
More than one above is true
E)
None of the above is true
 
Answer: C
Flotation
 
 
Since iron is more dense than water, how can ships made of iron float??
 
It’s because effective density is
less since it is filled with air or
lighter things:
 
Iron has 8 x density of water, so if a
block, it sinks.
Instead, shape it into a boat, it
displaces a greater volume of water
( in a sense, the boat has a larger
effective volume). So greater
buoyant force – when it equals its
weight, it will no longer sink.
 
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So, when building ships etc, need to make them wide enough.
Which of the following is true for a ten-ton ship floating in salt water
compared to floating in fresh water?
A)
The buoyant force is greater in the salt water, and there is more salt water
displaced
B)
The buoyant force is greater in the salt water, and there is less salt water
displaced
C)
The buoyant force is less in the salt water, and there is less salt water
displaced
D)
The buoyant force is less in the salt water, and there is more salt water
displaced
E)
The buoyant force is the same in salt water and fresh water, but there is
more salt water displaced
F)
The buoyant force is the same in salt water and fresh water, but there is
less salt water displaced
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Answer: F
Since floating, buoyant force = weight =10 tons, whether in salt or fresh water.
Since buoyant force = weight of liquid displaced, and density of salt water >
density of fresh water, a smaller volume of salt water is displaced. Ship floats
higher in salt water than in fresh water.
 
The density of
the block of wood
floating in water is
 
1. greater than the density of water.
2. equal to the density of water.
3. less than half that of water.
4. more than half the density of water.
5. … not enough information is given.
 
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A very-low-density object, like an inflated
balloon, floats high on the water, and a
denser object, like a piece of hardwood,
floats lower into the water. An object half as
dense as water floats halfway into the
water (because it weighs as much as half
its volume of water). Wood that floats 3/4
submerged, is 3/4 as dense as water—like
the block in question—more than half the
density of water.
 
The density of the block
compared to the density of
water is the same as the
fraction of the block below the
water line.
Pascal’s Principle
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Eg: City water pipes: If pumping station increases pressure by certain amount,
then pressure increases by that same amount in pipes throughout city.
 
Pascal’s principle enables large weights to be lifted via small forces:
 
Consider first simple U-tube: Pressure
exerted downwards on left piston
transmitted through tube to force right
piston upwards – same pressure,same
force
.
 
Now consider making right-side much
wider. Same pressure change throughout
means output force (= pressure x piston
area) is larger by factor of the area. Hence
large weights can be lifted by small forces.
 
Idea behind 
hydraulic press
. Simple machine: force multiplier (but same energy –
distance moved up on right is less by factor of area than distance moved down on left)
Surface tension
Surface of a liquid tends to contract – called surface tension.
Liquid tries to minimize surface area.
 
  
Surface tension is why liquid drops are
spherical – surfaces tend to contract so
force each drop into the shape with least
surface area, ie a sphere (ball).
Best seen with small drops, since gravity
flattens larger ones.
Surface tension cont.
 
 
Surface tension caused by molecular
attractions:
Below surface, molecule pulled by all
neighbours, all directions equally. So no net
pull.
At surface, there are no molecules above, so
net pull is downward into the liquid – leads to
minimization of surface area.
 
  
Water – unusually high surface tension compared to common liquids.
Soap or oil floating on water tends to get pulled out into a film entire
surface, so to minimize surface area of the 
water
.
 
 
Surface tension depends on temperature: Cold water – larger  surf.  tension
than hot, since molecules don’t move as fast, so more strongly bonded.
So in hot soups, oil or fat bubbles can form spherical droplets floating on top.
When soup cools, the fat is drawn over the entire soup forming a film –
“greasy soup”. Big reason why cold soup tastes different from hot!
Capillarity
 
 
 
Another effect of “sticky molecules” in liquid – liquid
tends to rise up thin (glass)  tubes. The thinner the
tube, the greater the rise. Called capillarity.
 
How exactly does this work?
Molecules stick more to glass than to themselves.
 
So liquid drawn up to glass surface
and then contracts. Steps:
 
 
Responsible for why if one end of a towel hangs down into water, it soaks
upwards
 
 
Essential for plants – how water goes from the ground into roots and sap up
to high branches
 
 
Compared to an
 
empty ship, will a ship
loaded with a cargo of Styrofoam float lower in
water or higher in water?
 
1. Lower in water
 
2. Higher in water
 
A
n
s
w
e
r
:
 
1
,
 
L
o
w
e
r
 
i
n
 
w
a
t
e
r
Principle of Flotation: A floating object displaces a weight of fluid equal to its own
weight. Ship with cargo weighs more, so will displace more water, i.e. float lower in
water.
 
A ship will float highest when its weight is least—that is, when it is empty. Loading any
cargo will increase its weight and make it float lower in the water. Whether the cargo is
a ton of Styrofoam or a ton of iron, (i.e. same weight), the water displacement will be
the same.
 
An astronaut on Earth notes that in her soft
drink an ice cube floats with 9/10 its volume
submerged. If she were instead in a lunar
module parked on the Moon, the ice in the
same soft drink would float with
 
1. less than 9/10 submerged.
2. 9/10 submerged.
3. more than 9/10 submerged.
 
A
n
s
w
e
r
:
 
2
How much a floating object extends below and above the liquid depends on
the weight of the object and the weight of the displaced fluid, both of which
are proportional to 
g
. Lower 
g
 or increase it; the proportion floating above
and below is unchanged.
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Exploring the concepts of density and pressure in liquids, this content covers topics such as the relationship between weight and density, examples of different material densities, and the effects of pressure on different surfaces. Understanding these principles can help grasp how matter behaves in liquid environments.

  • Density and Pressure
  • Liquids
  • Weight
  • Force
  • Surface
  • Matter

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  1. TODAY: Finish Ch. 11 Start Liquids (Ch. 13)

  2. Ch 13 (Liquids) First, concept of density (in Ch 12, everything else of which we are skipping) Weight density = weight Simply related by g = 9.8 N/kg Density = mass volume volume (near earth) Density measures how squished up the matter is, not how heavy it is Eg. A feather quilt may be heavier than a metal spoon, but the spoon is more dense than the quilt. Only if you have equal sizes (ie. volumes) of two materials, are their relative densities directly related to their weight.

  3. A little more on density Some densities: Osmium (bluish-white metal) is the densest substance on earth. It s an element (atomic # 76), whose crystalline form has very closely packed atoms. Density 22.6 g/cm3. Used e.g. in fountain pen tips, electrical contacts, where extreme durability/hardness needed. Water has density 1 g/cm3 Ice has less density, 0.92 g/cm3, because when water freezes, it expands. Seawater has greater density, 1.03 g/cm3.

  4. Clicker Question Which has greater density, 1 liter of water or 1 liter of ice? And which weighs more? A)The water has greater density and weighs more B) The water has greater density but weighs less C) The water has less density but weighs more D) The water has less density and weighs less Answer: A Any amount of water has greater density than anyamount of ice (it doesn t depend on amount, since density is the ratio of mass to volume). Since water has greater density, it weighs more than an equal volume of ice.

  5. Pressure Why does it hurt so much more when a thumbtack pin is pressed into your hand than when a marble is, pressing equally hard ?? Even though the force in each case may be the same, one (the pin) acts over a much smaller area than the other (marble). So, define force area Pressure = Question: Why is a bed-ridden person less likely to develop bedsores on their bodies if they use a waterbed rather than an ordinary (i.e. more rigid) mattress? Because more of the body is in contact with the supporting surface on the waterbed than on the mattress, so there is less bodyweight pressure. (Larger area in eqn above, same force, so less pressure)

  6. Pressure in a liquid A liquid is composed of molecules that move constantly and bounce off the sides of the container it is in and or bounce off objects (like a swimmer) in the liquid. Bouncing creates a force (recall momentum-impulse) hence a pressure. due to liquid s weight directly above Liquid Pressure = weight density x depth area x depth Proof : Pressure = force = weight area = weight density x volume area = weight density x depth area

  7. Pressure in a liquid: dependence on depth. Pressure at a point twice as deep, is twice as much. Consider swimming: Near top surface of the water, don t feel much pressure (depth is near 0). (More precisely, need to add air pressure of the atmosphere but since it s there all the time, we don t notice that). Go deeper - you feel more pressure (e.g. in your ears). The deeper you go, the more weight of water is above you, so more pressure you feel. It does not depend on the volume, only on the depth Eg. Same water pressure felt when swimming 2m deep in a backyard pool than when swimming 2m deep in a huge freshwater lake.

  8. Eg. Different shaped vases all connected the level of the water in each is the same. Why? Because, if not, the pressure would be more at the bottom of the vase with higher water level (from eqn, larger depth). This increased pressure would then force water sideways to lower pressure, and then up the vase with lower level. Eventually pressures equalize which means same water level in each. This gives rise to the saying water seeks it s own level . Eg. Hold a garden hose filled with water, and hold both ends at same height, water stays. Now if raise one end, water flows out lower end, even through an uphill path.

  9. Clicker Question There is more pressure felt by a swimmer at the bottom of A)The large but shallow lake B)The small but deep pond C)Same for both Answer: B The pressure at the bottom of the small but deep pond here is twice as great as the pressure at the bottom of the large shallow lake.

  10. Pressure in liquid: density dependence Recall: Liquid Pressure = weight density x depth If liquid is twice as dense, the liquid pressure is also twice as much. Eg. Saltwater is more dense than fresh water (see earlier slide on density). So saltwater has more liquid pressure (makes it easier to float in the ocean than in a freshwater lake see shortly for more on floating). Liquids are very difficult to compress so even for a large body of liquid, the density is practically the same at all depths.

  11. Liquid Pressure: Direction Liquid pressure is exerted equally in all directions. Eg Swimming underwater, pressure on eardrum is same if tilt head in any direction. Eg. Water spurts sideways from holes in the side Eg. Boat on water water pressure acts upward on the boat surface Although force has direction, pressure does not(it s a scalar) At any point on the triangular block shown, force from bouncing molecules are in all directions, but only that normal to the surface doesn t get cancelled out. Net force is normal (perpendicular) to (any) surface.

  12. Buoyancy Buoyant force = upward force acting on an object in liquid, due to pressure on lower part of object being higher than pressure on upper part: Why? Because liquid pressure is larger for larger depths. Question:If there s an upward buoyant force on a submerged object, then how come it doesn t accelerate upwards (N s 2nd law) ?? There are also other forces acting gravitational force and water resistance. Whether it accelerates or not, and in which direction (up or down), depends on how these balance. Eg. if push a light ball under water, it accelerates up once you let go due to buoyant force being dominant. But if you push a boulder under water, it will sink, as weight (grav force) is larger than the buoyant force.

  13. Displacement: towards Archimedes principle First we need the concept of volume of water displaced A completely submerged object always displaces a volume of liquid equal to its own volume: If have container full of water, and then add a rock: Volume of water dripped out = volume of rock. Regardless of weight of rock eg. a 1-liter container of milk and a 1-liter container of air submerged in water, both displace the same amount of water. If container is big: then increase in volume level = volume of rock

  14. Aside: Aside: Archimedes and the King s Crown This concept of displacement of water is really useful if you want to measure the volume of odd-shaped objects. There is a story of how Archimedes (circa 250 BC) discovered this. King Hiero II had given a goldsmith a lump of pure gold of a certain weight to make him an elaborate crown. He then wanted to verify that the goldsmith did in fact use all the gold, and didn t substitute part of a cheaper metal like silver, taking some of the gold for himself instead. How to determine this without destroying the crown? While taking a bath, Archimedes realized when an object is put in water, the water level rises an amount equal to the object s volume (displacement principle). So: Can measure that the crown and gold ingot have the same weight. When put in water, the king s crown displaced more water than the gold ingot larger volume lower density, i.e. not pure gold

  15. Buoyancy: Archimedes Principle An immersed body is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces. Applies to liquids and gases Applies to either partially submerged objects or fully submerged objects So buoyant force depends on object s volume. Eg. What is the buoyant force on a 1-liter container of anything in water so that just half of it is in the water? force on it is the weight of 0.5-liters of water = 0.5 x 9.8 N = 4.9 N. Same volume, 0.5-liter, of water is displaced, so the buoyant Recall 1-liter of anything is 1000 cm3. Recall mass density of water is 1g/cm3, so weight density is 1xg = 9.8 N/cm3. So weight of 1 liter of water is 9.8 N. If fully submerged, the buoyant force is greater equal to 9.8 N in the case of (any) 1-liter object.

  16. More on Archimedes Principle For a fully submerged object, the buoyant force is independent of depth, even though the pressure depends on depth: The difference between the pressure at the bottom of the object and the pressure at the top is what causes the buoyant force. This difference is same at any depth it just depends on how tall the object is. Because of the buoyant force, apparent weight in water is less than weight in air: Here, the 3N object displaces an amount of water weighing 2N = buoyant force. So its weight in water is reduced to 1N.

  17. Clicker Question Upon which is the buoyant force larger a fish that has eaten a huge meal, or its hungry identical twin? (Assume that the full fish holds its tummy in so that its volume is the same but its mass and density are greater). A) The fish who had its meal B) The hungry twin C) Same for both Answer: C The buoyant force is the same on each, since both fish have same volume so displace the same amount of water.

  18. Very Important!!! It s the volume of the object that determines the buoyant force, not its weight! Eg. A small steel ball experiences less upward buoyant force than a large styrofoam ball. The steel ball sinks because its downward gravitational force is much bigger Sink or float depends on the objects weight as well next slide..

  19. Sinking vs Floating Depends on whether object s weight is greater (sink) or less (float) than buoyant force. downward force upward force Since weight = weight density x volume, and buoyant force = fluid density x volume, then sinking vs floating depends on the relative density of the object to fluid: (i) If object denser than fluid, it will sink (ii) If object less dense than fluid, it will float (iii)If same density, then it will neither sink nor float. Eg. If you are very muscular, it s hard for you to float in water, as you are too dense! Taking a huge breath to inflate your lungs could help to reduce your average density temporarily, or wear a life jacket this increases your volume but decreases average density since it is so light.

  20. Example: Fish normally have about the same density as water (so neither sink nor float). They have an air sac that they can contract or expand. Question: If a fish wanted to swim upward, then what should it do with its air sac? How about if it wanted to move downward? density. Since density = mass/volume, this means increasing volume by expanding the air sac would make fish move up. To move up, want to increase buoyant force, so decrease To move down, contract air sac. Another point about the buoyant force: Something that may sink in water, may float in salt water (more dense), or in mercury (even more dense). Why? Because denser fluids have more weight for same volume displaced, so greater buoyant force. Hence, easier to float in ocean s seawater than freshwater pool (recall earlier). And, iron floats in mercury but sinks in water

  21. Clicker Question Consider holding a ping-pong ball and a golf ball of the same size under water. Then release them both. The ping-pong ball will rise to the surface whereas the golf-ball will fall. Why? A) The buoyant force is smaller on the golf ball than on the ping- pong ball. Both the buoyant force and the gravitational force are larger on the golf ball than on the ping-pong ball due to its greater mass. The buoyant force is the same on both balls but less than the gravitational force for the golf ball and larger than the gravitational force for the ping-pong ball. More than one above is true None of the above is true B) C) D) E) Answer: C

  22. Flotation Since iron is more dense than water, how can ships made of iron float?? It s because effective density is less since it is filled with air or lighter things: Iron has 8 x density of water, so if a block, it sinks. Instead, shape it into a boat, it displaces a greater volume of water ( in a sense, the boat has a larger effective volume). So greater buoyant force when it equals its weight, it will no longer sink. Principle of flotation : A floating object displaces a weight of fluid equal to its own weight = buoyant force for floating objects. So, when building ships etc, need to make them wide enough.

  23. Clicker Question Which of the following is true for a ten-ton ship floating in salt water compared to floating in fresh water? A) The buoyant force is greater in the salt water, and there is more salt water displaced B) The buoyant force is greater in the salt water, and there is less salt water displaced C) The buoyant force is less in the salt water, and there is less salt water displaced D) The buoyant force is less in the salt water, and there is more salt water displaced E) The buoyant force is the same in salt water and fresh water, but there is more salt water displaced F) The buoyant force is the same in salt water and fresh water, but there is less salt water displaced Answer: F Since floating, buoyant force = weight =10 tons, whether in salt or fresh water. Since buoyant force = weight of liquid displaced, and density of salt water > density of fresh water, a smaller volume of salt water is displaced. Ship floats higher in salt water than in fresh water.

  24. Clicker Question The density of the block of wood floating in water is 1. greater than the density of water. 2. equal to the density of water. 3. less than half that of water. 4. more than half the density of water. 5. not enough information is given.

  25. Answer: 4 Principle of flotation: A floating object displaces a weight of fluid equal to its own weight. Weight of displaced fluid = (density- of-water) x volume of block Weight = density x volume of block, so density-of-block = (density-of-water) The density of the block of wood floating in water is 1. greater than the density of water. 2. equal to the density of water. 3. less than half that of water. 4. more than half the density of water. 5. not enough information is given. A very-low-density object, like an inflated balloon, floats high on the water, and a denser object, like a piece of hardwood, floats lower into the water. An object half as dense as water floats halfway into the water (because it weighs as much as half its volume of water). Wood that floats 3/4 submerged, is 3/4 as dense as water like the block in question more than half the density of water. The density of the block compared to the density of water is the same as the fraction of the block below the water line.

  26. Pascals Principle A change in pressure at any point in an enclosed fluid at rest is transmitted undiminished to all points in the fluid. Eg: City water pipes: If pumping station increases pressure by certain amount, then pressure increases by that same amount in pipes throughout city. Pascal s principle enables large weights to be lifted via small forces: Consider first simple U-tube: Pressure exerted downwards on left piston transmitted through tube to force right piston upwards same pressure,same force. Now consider making right-side much wider. Same pressure change throughout means output force (= pressure x piston area) is larger by factor of the area. Hence large weights can be lifted by small forces. Idea behind hydraulic press. Simple machine: force multiplier (but same energy distance moved up on right is less by factor of area than distance moved down on left)

  27. Surface tension Surface of a liquid tends to contract called surface tension. Liquid tries to minimize surface area. Example: But when raised, the surface film of the water contracts and pulls hairs together Paintbrush in water hairs spread out, as they would if dry in air. Surface tension is why liquid drops are spherical surfaces tend to contract so force each drop into the shape with least surface area, ie a sphere (ball). Best seen with small drops, since gravity flattens larger ones.

  28. Surface tension cont. sticky molecules Surface tension caused by molecular attractions: Below surface, molecule pulled by all neighbours, all directions equally. So no net pull. At surface, there are no molecules above, so net pull is downward into the liquid leads to minimization of surface area. Water unusually high surface tension compared to common liquids. Soap or oil floating on water tends to get pulled out into a film entire surface, so to minimize surface area of the water. Surface tension depends on temperature: Cold water larger surf. tension than hot, since molecules don t move as fast, so more strongly bonded. So in hot soups, oil or fat bubbles can form spherical droplets floating on top. When soup cools, the fat is drawn over the entire soup forming a film greasy soup . Big reason why cold soup tastes different from hot!

  29. Capillarity Another effect of sticky molecules in liquid liquid tends to rise up thin (glass) tubes. The thinner the tube, the greater the rise. Called capillarity. How exactly does this work? Molecules stick more to glass than to themselves. adhesion cohesion Height reached is determined by balance between upward adhesive force and downward grav. force on column So liquid drawn up to glass surface and then contracts. Steps: Responsible for why if one end of a towel hangs down into water, it soaks upwards Essential for plants how water goes from the ground into roots and sap up to high branches

  30. Compared to an empty ship, will a ship loaded with a cargo of Styrofoam float lower in water or higher in water? 1. Lower in water 2. Higher in water

  31. Compared to an empty ship, will a ship loaded with a cargo of Styrofoam float lower in water or higher in water? 1. Lower in water 2. Higher in water Answer: 1, Lower in water Principle of Flotation: A floating object displaces a weight of fluid equal to its own weight. Ship with cargo weighs more, so will displace more water, i.e. float lower in water. A ship will float highest when its weight is least that is, when it is empty. Loading any cargo will increase its weight and make it float lower in the water. Whether the cargo is a ton of Styrofoam or a ton of iron, (i.e. same weight), the water displacement will be the same.

  32. An astronaut on Earth notes that in her soft drink an ice cube floats with 9/10 its volume submerged. If she were instead in a lunar module parked on the Moon, the ice in the same soft drink would float with 1. less than 9/10 submerged. 2. 9/10 submerged. 3. more than 9/10 submerged.

  33. An astronaut on Earth notes that in her soft drink an ice cube floats with 9/10 its volume submerged. If she were instead in a lunar module parked on the Moon, the ice in the same soft drink would float with 1. less than 9/10 submerged. 2. 9/10 submerged. 3. more than 9/10 submerged. Answer: 2 How much a floating object extends below and above the liquid depends on the weight of the object and the weight of the displaced fluid, both of which are proportional to g. Lower g or increase it; the proportion floating above and below is unchanged.

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