Submarine Buoyancy Differential Equation

AI Thread Summary
A submarine with a mass of 80,000 kg is neutrally buoyant at a depth of 200 m and begins to pump out water from its ballast tanks at a rate of 600 liters per minute. The discussion focuses on determining the vertical velocity of the submarine after 10 seconds of ascent, using principles from Archimedes and Newton's Second Law. Initial calculations incorrectly assumed the volume of the submarine and the density of water, but these errors were acknowledged to cancel each other out in the final analysis. The impact of water viscosity on drag was also noted as a factor not mentioned in the problem. Overall, the approach to solving the problem was confirmed as correct with some adjustments needed in the initial assumptions.
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Homework Statement


A submarine of mass 80 000 kg is floating at rest (neutrally buoyant) at a depth of 200 m in sea water. It starts pumping out sea water from its ballast tanks at a rate of 600 litres per minute, thus affecting both its mass and the buoyancy force. Determine the vertical velocity of the submarine after 10 seconds of ascent, assuming that the ballast tanks are large enough to be emptied at a constant rate throughout the ascent. [You may assume that the density of sea water is 1 kg per litre. The acceleration due to gravity g =10 m s−2 . Also assume that water pumped from the tanks leaves the submarine at negligible velocity, and the air in the empty part of the tank has negligible weight.]

Homework Equations


Archimedes Principle
Newton's Second Law

The Attempt at a Solution


Let V = volume of submarine = 80000m^3 (from equal densities at t=0)
From N2L applied upwards
m(t) * a = Vg-m(t)g
So I think a = Vg/m(t) -g

m(t)=80000-dm/dt * t
dm/dt = 600/60 =10
m(t) = 80000-10t

Plugging this in leads to a = 8000g/(8000-t) - g

Is this correct?

Thank you very much in advance...
 
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The procedure looks right. V is not 80000 m3 - the density of water is not 1 kg/m3! And in your N2L expression, Vg should be Vρg, where ρ is the density of water. However, these two mistakes cancel out - you could just have used the mass of displaced water directly.
 
Ah perfect, of course! Thank you! :)
 
I note that the problem doesn't mention the effect of drag due to the viscosity of the water :smile:
 
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