Dadface said:
Leena ...a few notes of clarification:
1.The volume of water displaced includes that of the cavity but only if it were sealed and water couldn't enter.Imagine a ship getting holed and taking on water.
Sorry.I'm not sure I understand this. If the cavity was sealed in then why should we add the volume of the cavity to find the upthrust?
Shouldn't we just take the outer volume of the object without the cavity?
Isn't this what rl.bhat says in posts #11 & #13 ?(at least that's what I think,please correct me if I'm wrong)
The reason I'm so confused is,we did another question in class based on the Archimedes' principle ,where we were asked to find the volume of the cavity(the cavity here allows water to completely flow through)in an object.
Here's
the question:
A metal object of mass 8kg with a cavity is attached to an inflated spherical rubber balloon with a light string,as shown in the figure.
[URL=http://img15.imageshack.us/my.php?image=11398294.png][PLAIN]http://img15.imageshack.us/img15/2162/11398294.th.png[/URL][/PLAIN]
When the radius of the balloon is 10cm,the system just floats in the deep lake .
Density of metal(d) is 8000kgm
-3 and the density of water (rho)is 1000kgm
-3
1)Neglecting the mass of the balloon find the volume of the cavity in the metal object.
The solution :
Volume of metal object with cavity=V'
Volume of balloon=V"
Law of flotation
Mg = (V'+V")*rho*g
8g = (V+ 4/3*pi*r
3)*rho
Then we found V' which is equal to 3.81*10
-3 m
3
Volume of metal only = mass/density
=8/8000=1*10
-3m
3
Then to find the volume of cavity
V' = Volume of metal + volume of cavity
3.81*10
-3=1*10
-3 + V
2.81*10
-3m
3 = V
My question is
why in this question,we have taken the volume of the cavity as well as the volume of the metal to find the upthrust,even though water flows through the hole?
And in the surface tension question on the tube ,we've taken only the volume of the solid part of it and not the volume of the hole or cavity?
To me, both methods seem to contradict each other,yet they both yield the correct answer.
But I don't understand how it works and why we include the volume of the cavity in one and in the other we completely ignore it?
I have looked everywhere for an explanation,in the PF library(found something on buoyant force,which explained the buoyant force in solid objects well but was not much related to this question I think)and countless websites,.still couldn't find anything on the upthrust acting on objects with cavities.
I've always had problems with fluid dynamics,so please help me understand this.
I hope someone could at least provide me some links on the Archimedes' principle?
Any and all help is much appreciated.