Water Pressure and Equilibrium in Underwater Cylinders

AI Thread Summary
An underwater cylinder, when submerged 100 meters, will fill with water if its bottom is removed. Introducing a slightly smaller bucket into the cylinder complicates the scenario, as the water pressure at that depth will exert force on the bucket. The discussion concludes that the bucket would need to be 100 meters tall, filled with water, to counteract the pressure pushing it upward. This means the pressure of the surrounding water would push the bucket up unless it is adequately filled. The key takeaway is that the height of the water column in the bucket must match the external water pressure to maintain equilibrium.
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theoritically, if an empty cylinder (say 2 meters diameter) was pushed down 100 meters in the ocean and held there in equilibrium (not moving up or down), and the bottom was cut out, the water would rush up to fill the cylinder to a the same level as the ocean surface. What if there was a bucket of water that was just slightly smaller than the 2 meter diameter of the cylinder (so the water in the cylnder will not escape through over the bucket) lowered into the bottom (100 meters down), and the bottom was removed. Would the pressure of water at 100 meters push the bucket up?? How tall would the bucket have to be (filled with water), to stop the water pressure from pushing the bucket up?

thanks
 
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What would be your guess?
 
meaning that the bucket is in the cylinder? and the bucket is "open ended"?
 
Yes open at the top to the air.
 
Well, what do you think the answer is? From your first post, I think you could hazard a guess. If the ocean could support a column of water 100 m tall, would it really matter that the water is contained in a bucket? (Assuming we can ignore the weight of the bucket itself.)
 
well Doc, i guess you are saying the bucket will be 100 meters.
 
Yep. Does that make sense to you?
 
yes, thanks your time.
 
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