jbriggs444
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You have not specified what scenario this question applies to.metastable said:Do you deny changing only the shape of the inner sphere without changing its mass will affect the force required from the spring for a given acceleration?
I will guess that you are talking about an outer spherical container and an internal container whose shape is variable but whose volume is fixed. The internal container, the fluid it contains and the fluid between the containers is incompressible and all of the same uniform density.
You ask about the acceleration of the inner shape as it is propelled away from the wall of the outer container.
I do not deny that drag affects this acceleration.
You expect that the acceleration of the outer container as a result of the force of the spring is non-zero and that it is related to the acceleration of the inner shape in some way.
I do deny that drag affects this acceleration since it is identically zero. The force of the spring on the outer container is exactly and immediately countered by pressure and drag forces from the fluid on the outer container.
What you consistently fail to recognize is that the rigid container acts as a constraint on the behavior of the fluid within. When the inner container moves, the fluid between the two containers is constrained to move in a manner which is consistent with this. It has to stay inside the outer container and outside the inner. Pressure gradients will immediately form which are sufficient to enforce this constraint.
Given the uniform density, this means that the center of mass of the outer container's contents cannot move relative to the outer container. Assuming that the outer container is spherically symmetric, this means that the combined center of mass of the outer container plus contents will always be at the geometric center of the outer container. Since the spring force is internal to the system, the center of mass cannot move as a result. And the outer container cannot move [linearly] relative to its center of mass.
The pressure gradients which enforce flow consistency are also the pressure gradients which ensure that there is no unbalanced net force on the outer container.
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