How Does Buoyant Force Influence Water Flow Through a Hole in a Sinking Bowl?

AI Thread Summary
Buoyant force influences water flow through a hole in a sinking bowl by increasing as weight is added, causing the bowl to displace more water. The water pressure increases with depth, which affects how water enters the bowl through the hole. The buoyant force is not uniformly distributed across the bowl's base due to varying pressure at different depths. Understanding Archimedes' principle is essential, but recognizing the role of water pressure is also crucial. This phenomenon can be further analyzed by measuring the area of the bowl's base and the volume of displaced water to calculate the force.
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Homework Statement


so i have an to do an EEI for an assignment due this friday. My experiment involves me putting a rounded bowl with a flat bottom and a hole in the center on the bottom onto some still water and testing how the bowl sinks faster as weight is added to the bowl. The water comes up through the hole in the bottom of the bowl, filling it from the bottom, faster as i add more weight. i am assuming this is because i am displacing more water as weight is added so there will be a greater buoyant force acting upwards but i don't fully understand why the water is coming up through the hole. is the buoyant force spread equally along the whole bottom of the bowl making it come through the hole because there is nothing solid to stop it from coming upwards (can i work out how many Newtons of force are making the water come up through the hole, if i measure the area of the bottom of the bowl/the volume of displaced water etc.)
are there any other physics concepts i need to know other than Archimedes' principle to fully understand this phenomenon?...any background theory information will be greatly appreciated! Thanks

Homework Equations



buoyant force = weight of fluid displaced
 
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Bowl + Hole in bottom = Sinking Bowl
 
Welcome to Physics Forums newmessiah :smile:

Well, the water pressure increases with depth. The hole is at some depth, below the top surface of the water. Something along those lines should probably come into your explanation.
 
thanks for that!
do you know if the total bouyant force would be spread equally over the base of the bowl?
 
newmessiah said:
do you know if the total bouyant force would be spread equally over the base of the bowl?
Well, the buoyant force comes from the pressure being different at different water depths (higher pressure at deeper depths). Is the base of the bowl all at the same depth?
 
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