lost captain
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I feel like this is the dumbest question I've ever asked in my life, and honestly I'm sorry for taking anyone's time that's willing to answer.
So I have a rectagular prism container that has 4ml of water and i submerged a metallic plate that has volume 1ml, just like the picture below.
The plate fits snuggly in there and I'm holding the plate with a string so basically it is neutrally buoyant.
1) If the plate is fully submerged, no mater the depth, the displaced water will be 1ml. So we will see the water level rise from 4ml to 5ml. Right?
2) When I half submerge the plate, half of it's volume will be under water so 0.5 ml gets submerged and also 0,5 ml of water will get displaced on top...so the plate ends up fully submerged ? How can the plate be fully submerged with only 0,5ml of water displaced, it can't...,but then again that displaced water will go on top so...? What am i missing here?
I understand that if the submerged volume is 0.5ml then the water level should rise at 4,5ml, but then it will be like the submerged volume is submerged in the displaced water...
Thank you, and I'm sorry
So I have a rectagular prism container that has 4ml of water and i submerged a metallic plate that has volume 1ml, just like the picture below.
The plate fits snuggly in there and I'm holding the plate with a string so basically it is neutrally buoyant.
1) If the plate is fully submerged, no mater the depth, the displaced water will be 1ml. So we will see the water level rise from 4ml to 5ml. Right?
2) When I half submerge the plate, half of it's volume will be under water so 0.5 ml gets submerged and also 0,5 ml of water will get displaced on top...so the plate ends up fully submerged ? How can the plate be fully submerged with only 0,5ml of water displaced, it can't...,but then again that displaced water will go on top so...? What am i missing here?
I understand that if the submerged volume is 0.5ml then the water level should rise at 4,5ml, but then it will be like the submerged volume is submerged in the displaced water...
Thank you, and I'm sorry