Weight in Vacuum vs Atmosphere: A Question

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The weight of an object is influenced by the buoyant force of the surrounding medium, such as air, which can slightly alter the downward force it exerts due to gravity. While this buoyant effect is often negligible in everyday scenarios, it becomes significant in precise measurements. The buoyant force of air is approximately 1.2 kg (12 N) per cubic meter, which can affect the weight of objects, especially in dense mediums like water. For example, a 75 kg person experiences only about a 100 g difference in weight due to air buoyancy. Understanding these nuances is crucial for accurate weight measurements in various environments.
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not sure if this question has been asked before, but is the weight of an object the same in a vacuum compared to weight in an atmosphere. the concerns of this question is that do we need to consider that our atmosphere provides some boyancy on our mass to change the value of weight.
 
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If by "weight" you mean the downward force that a stationary object exerts on whatever is supporting it against gravity, yes, it depends on the buoyant force of the surrounding medium. If the medium is air, we usually ignore this effect, especially in introductory textbook examples, but if you need a lot of precision you may have to take it into account. Or if the medium is dense, e.g. water.
 
Weight is the force an object feels due to gravity.
So you only feel it if you are standing on (or near) an object

Yes the boyancy of air has a small effect on the downward force.
I suppose you could split hairs and say this doesn't change the weight, it only changes the total downward force but in everyday language this is the weight - you could always say "apparent weight" if you want to be more precise
 
what is the bouyant force of air??
 
northern expo said:
what is the bouyant force of air??
About 1.2kg (12N) per m^3

If a person has a mass of 75kg and the density of water, they will have a volume of 0.075m^3 so the bouyancy of air only makes about 100g difference.
 
It gets more complicated when you want to weight something - for really precise work you should take into account density difference between object and weights material.
 
northern expo said:
what is the bouyant force of air??

Buoyancy is the force exterted upward to keep a given object afloat. In the case of air, buoyancy is proportional to altitude. As an object rises in the air its buoyancy decreases as the density of the surrounding air decreases and vice-versa as the object falls.

Hope I was able to explain that well.
 
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