B Floating 0.5 Density Wood Beam: Potential Energy Explained

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A wood beam with a density of 0.5 floating on water of density 1 experiences stability issues when oriented vertically due to its center of mass being higher than when horizontal. The buoyant force acting on the submerged portion of the beam creates a torque that favors a horizontal position, making vertical floating unstable. Even slight disturbances can cause the beam to tip over, as the center of gravity must remain below the center of buoyancy for stability. The discussion highlights the importance of the relationship between the center of gravity and the center of buoyancy in determining the stability of floating objects. Ultimately, the beam's potential energy is influenced by the water's buoyancy, which pushes the beam's center of mass upward when it tips to a horizontal position.
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theres one beam of wood of density 0.5 floating on water of density one

the beam is vertical and i assume it will go to horizontality

this force that moved the wood beam implies a work has been done and hence potential energy has been spent

but if the beam has density 0.5 it means it has the same volume underwater than over water either horizontally or vertically hence its cog hasnt varied height and on the same manner the level of water remains in the same level with respect to the cog of the beam of wood

so from where comes the potential gravitational energy that has applied the work on the wood to move it from vertically floating to horizontally floating

my conclusion from this thought experiment is that a 0.5 density beam will float indiferently horizontally or vertically to kep conservation of energy true

is this correct?
 
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farolero said:
but if the beam has density 0.5 it means it has the same volume underwater than over water either horizontally or vertically hence its cog hasnt varied height and on the same manner the level of water remains in the same level with respect to the cog of the beam of wood

The center of mass of the beam is much further underwater when the beam is vertical than when it is horizontal. Hence it is more energetically favorable for it to float horizontally than vertically. If it helps, try to imagine cutting the beam into thin blocks. When oriented vertically, the blocks corresponding to the bottom end of the beam had to have much more work performed on them to counteract the buoyancy force than the blocks making up the top end and the water they are displacing is now at a higher level than it otherwise would be.
 
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well i don't see that what you say, check this diagram, the cog of the beam remains in same position weather the beam floats vertically or horizontally:

IMG_20161209_161427_zpsm6s48zwi.jpg
 
farolero said:
well i don't see that what you say, check this diagram, the cog of the beam remains in same position weather the beam floats vertically or horizontally:

The beam will not float vertically that way. It will fall over into the horizontal position.
 
im not very sure of that if the cog of the beam doesn't move nor the level of water moves

whay does it fall then? how has the beam spent potential energy as to move naturally?

maybe its imposible to get an exact 0.5 density and the slightest offset could make the beam lean?

after all ships as seen from in front are nearly vertical
 
Drakkith said:
The center of mass of the beam is much further underwater when the beam is vertical than when it is horizontal.
Why?
 
Floating horizontally or floating vertically, the center of mass of the beam does not change. It is located exactly at the surface of the water. Half of the beam is submerged and half floating either way.

However, the center of mass of the water is displaced downward when the beam rotates to horizontal. The hole in the water where the beam resides has moved upward and water has moved downward to fill in that space.
 
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farolero said:
well i don't see that what you say, check this diagram, the cog of the beam remains in same position weather the beam floats vertically or horizontally:

IMG_20161209_161427_zpsm6s48zwi.jpg

Consider the torque from the buoyant force around the CoM for small perturbations of those two extremes.
 
A.T. said:
Why?

I was under the impression that the beam was underwater.
 
  • #10
farolero said:
the slightest offset could make the beam lean?

That's right. A vertical orientation is an unstable position for the beam to be in, as even the slightest force will disturb it and send it rotating to the horizontal position.

farolero said:
whay does it fall then? how has the beam spent potential energy as to move naturally?

The part of the beam underwater wants to move upwards, while the part above water wants to move downwards. Both of these can happen if the beam rotates even slightly.

farolero said:
after all ships as seen from in front are nearly vertical

Of course. They are bottom-heavy, so their center of masses are under the water. If they weren't, they'd flip upside down or onto their sides.
 
  • #11
i see so to solve the problem i take the cog of the half overwater and the cog of the half underwater

then potential energy is spent in both cogs, is this correct?

but this sound strange to me how can something has two cogs?
 
  • #12
farolero said:
i see so to solve the problem i take the cog of the half overwater and the cog of the half underwater

is this correct?

but this sound strange to me how can something has two cogs?
You are missing the point. The center of gravity of the beam is utterly irrelevant. The center of gravity of the water is the bit that matters.
 
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  • #13
oh i see so potential energy to move the vertical beams comes from the water lowering its cog

thanks a lot i wouldn't have seen it without help
 
  • #14
consider the beam is 2 beams with half length attached together , and each has its own cog ...cog 1 above water and cog 2 under water, now the lower beam fully submerged and have a buoyancy force acting almost exactly at the same point of cog 2 upward with 0.5 , and the upper beam have have a downward force acting on cog 1 with amount of 1.0

2 forces acting oppositely, must tip over
 
  • #15
Yes, for a body to float vertically, center of gravity should remain below the surface of water. This beam (mass uniformly distributed) half immersed vertically in stagnant water will have its center of gravity at center shifted above the surface of water due to apparent reduce in weight due to buoyancy force faced at lower half. Still the beam can float vertically as long as the water and air above is absolutely stagnant. Once disturbed, even slightest of the forces acting at upper or lower half of beam perpendicularly create torque and result in collapsing horizontally. Consider the same beam with greater area of cross - section and lesser height, shift in center of gravity will reduce and tries to keep it closer to center but never at center or below center due to buoyancy, chances of flipping reduce as greater torque is required. In order to bring the resultant center of gravity to center of beam or below center, mass of lower part of beam should be increased, means as long as the beam has mass uniformly distributed, it is impossible to keep it floating vertical as long as water is not stagnant or air above water is not stagnant.

I thought on my own and wrote it But... after seeing above threads, All I have done was summarizing all the above threads. I was just late to give a reply to this post
 
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  • #16
farolero said:
oh i see so potential energy to move the vertical beams comes from the water lowering its cog

thanks a lot i wouldn't have seen it without help
Water don't lower cog. It pushes the cog of beam upwards. Even if the beam flips horizontally, the cog will be at the upper half of beam that's why it is easier to roll a beam floating horizontally. But when compared to vertical orientation, horizontal orientation will have cog at lesser height compared to vertical height and since water flipped the beam in such a way, Yes, water has lowered its cog to bring it to static equilibrium. Be clear.
 
  • #17
AlphaLearner said:
Yes, for a body to float vertically, center of gravity should remain below the surface of water.
This is a simplistic view that assumes that center of pressure does not move appreciably as the object rocks from side to side. That assumption may be justified in the case at hand, but cannot be justified in general. Take for instance a flat balsa raft floating in the mercury with a mast extending vertically above the center. The center of mass of the raft+mast can be above the surface of the mercury but the raft nonetheless floats in a stable horizontal orientation. This is because the center of pressure moves more dramatically under small deflections than the center of gravity.

That is a more correct condition for stability -- that the center of mass deflects less than the center of pressure under small rotations.
 
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  • #18
jbriggs444 said:
That is a more correct condition for stability -- that the center of mass deflects less than the center of pressure under small rotations.
Means center of pressure shifts itself in order to minimize shift in center of gravity to maintain stability? Then should effectiveness of shift in center of pressure to reduce change in center of gravity should depend on area of cross - section of body floating on surface?
 
  • #19
AlphaLearner said:
Means center of pressure shifts itself in order to minimize shift in center of gravity to maintain stability. Then should effectiveness of shift in center of pressure to reduce change in center of gravity should depend on area of cross - section of body floating on surface?
It's not purely area. Consider a catamaran or pontoon boat. You improve stability by moving the pontoons farther apart. But that does not change either the surface cross-section or the wetted surface.
 
  • #20
jbriggs444 said:
It's not purely area. Consider a catamaran or pontoon boat. You improve stability by moving the pontoons farther apart. But that does not change either the surface cross-section or the wetted surface.
But, in case of this beam, area of cross section is less, no features to move Its ends farther like pontoons then it seems effect of center of pressure too less or considered negligible. I don't feel extending pontoons will effect center of pressure rather increase moment of inertia to prevent flipping on...
 
  • #21
And yes, for a circular beam, greater surface area means greater radius, means greater moment of inertia means lesser chances of flipping. And beam here is considered to have uniform mass and area. Not like a balsa raft and mast or pontoon boat. I know you were trying to generalize and also my explanation is not for general. I gave mine with respect to the beam @farolero mentioned. Not anything else.
 
  • #22
I think that this discussion might have progressed more quickly if the term "center of buoyancy" (COB) was introduced. This is the center of gravity (COG) of the displaced water. This is a concept that's well understood by boat designers. It's actually possible for a boat to be stable with its COG either above or below its COB. The higher COG works (within limits) because the shape of the hull causes more water to be displaced on the side that the boat tips towards. If I recall correctly, I think this is called a meta-stable condition. The tip angle can only grow to a limit before the boat flips. I think a canoe is an example of this situation. Having the COG below the COB is a much more stable position and is common for sailboats with a heavy ballast in a deep keel.
 
  • #23
Reid Isberg said:
I think this is called a meta-stable condition
Yes. "Metastable" would be correct for a position which is a local minimum for potential energy but not a global minimum. Like a sailboat which is metastable upright but which can "turtle" to a more stable inverted position.
 
  • #24
jbriggs444 said:
Yes. "Metastable" would be correct for a position which is a local minimum for potential energy but not a global minimum. Like a sailboat which is metastable upright but which can "turtle" to a more stable inverted position.
But why we came to boats when talking of the beam... We are going off topic. We are violating rules.
 
  • #25
Still, there are things to be taken from above which are useful.
 
  • #26
So... in order for that beam to float vertically, center of gravity should lie below center of mass of displaced water (center of buoyancy)... Am I right?
 
  • #27
Sorry for going off-topic a bit with the boat example. The question is about a symmetrical block. The "correctional" forces applied when the block rotates are minor. The most stable condition is with the COG directly below the COB. One way to think about the difference between the vertical block and the horizontal block is that nature also wants to minimize the distance between the COG and COB. So the block is most stable in the position with the smallest vertical dimension between these points.
 
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  • #28
Reid Isberg said:
The most stable condition is with the COG directly below the COB
Thanks for it!
 
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