Fish Bowl Physics: Does Weight Increase?

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When adding goldfish to a fish bowl half-filled with water on a scale, the overall weight does increase due to the mass of the fish. The buoyant force exerted by the water on the fish does not negate their weight; instead, it results in an equal downward force that contributes to the total weight measured by the scale. A practical demonstration using ice cubes in water illustrates that the scale reading increases with added mass, regardless of buoyancy effects. The confusion may stem from misunderstanding buoyancy and displacement, but the fundamental principle remains that the scale measures the total weight of the bowl and its contents. Therefore, the weight on the scale will rise with the addition of the goldfish.
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I am not sure if this is the right place to ask this. A couple us at my office were trying to decide if you have a fish bowl half filled with water sitting on a scale, then you add 3 goldfish does the weight increase?
 
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Yes. Goldfish weigh something. It doesn't matter if they are swimming or not.
 
Think of it this way...Are you adding mass to the system of what is being considered? If you add mass...
 
I think your co-workers are confused with the thought of "bouyancy".
This will be simple, have you co-workers do this:

Take a large glass, fill it halfway with water, place it on the office postal scale and note the reading. Now, place several ice cubes in the water(not so many that they touch the bottom of the glass) Note that the scale reading is higher.

Then, take that glass with the water and ice cubes and place it into your office refrigirator's freezer until the contents of the water and ice cubes freeze solid. Take it out and place it on the scale. That reading, and the one with water and ice cubes will be the same(minus collective condensation of course)
 
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chad6889 said:
... if you have a fish bowl half filled with water sitting on a scale, then you add 3 goldfish does the weight increase?
Of course the weight measured by the scale increases, as others explained. (Otherwise things would be really strange!)

Perhaps the confusion comes from the buoyant force that the water exerts on the fish. The net force on the fish (their weight minus buoyant force) is zero. (So, in a sense, they "weigh" less in water.) But that buoyant force comes at a price: the water level rises, increasing the water pressure and thus the force that the water exerts on the bottom of the bowl (and that the bowl, in turn, exerts on the scale).

Another way to think of buoyant force is this. If the water exerts an upward force on the fish (which it does), the fish in turn must exert an equal downward force on the water. That added downward force on the water ends up as an additional force on the scale that exactly equals the weight of the fish.

The bottom line is that the force that the scale exerts on the bowl (which is what the scale measures) must equal the total weight of the bowl and everything in it.
 
Doc Al said:
The bottom line is that the force that the scale exerts on the bowl (which is what the scale measures) must equal the total weight of the bowl and everything in it.
I wonder if the displacement might be confusing them. If the bowl was full of water, adding fish would dump some of it out. Obviously, when there's enough bowl to hold it all, that doesn't happen.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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