Rafael Aiguzhinov
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I wonder, what object can be drown to the deepest water ? I mean, the object where gravity is a lot more bigger than force of Archimedes
The discussion revolves around the question of what objects can sink to the deepest parts of the ocean, particularly focusing on the interplay between gravitational forces and buoyancy as depth increases. Participants explore concepts related to density, pressure, and the effects of gravity at various depths.
Participants do not reach a consensus on the initial question, with multiple competing views and interpretations of how gravity and buoyancy interact at great depths. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the specifics of what objects can survive at extreme depths.
Participants note limitations in their assumptions about gravity and pressure, and the discussion highlights the complexity of these interactions without resolving the underlying uncertainties.
Unfortunately your question didn't translate very well. Are you asking about how a sinking object is affected by stronger gravity as it sinks deeper? If so, I don't think the gravitational force increases with depth, since the gravitational attraction of the mass of the water above the sinking object decreases the net downward force on the object.Rafael Aiguzhinov said:I wonder, what object can be drown to the deepest water ? I mean, the object where gravity is a lot more bigger than force of Archimedes
Rafael Aiguzhinov said:I wonder, what object can be drown to the deepest water ? I mean, the object where gravity is a lot more bigger than force of Archimedes
You mean what? Please give much more detail about your question, or this thread will be closed as substandard.Rafael Aiguzhinov said:Yes, I meant this
If the density of the Earth were uniform and the same as water then the acceleration of gravity would indeed decrease linearly with depth. As you point out, this follows from Newton's spherical shell theorem: The mass of water above the object's depth "does not count" toward the attraction.berkeman said:Unfortunately your question didn't translate very well. Are you asking about how a sinking object is affected by stronger gravity as it sinks deeper? If so, I don't think the gravitational force increases with depth, since the gravitational attraction of the mass of the water above the sinking object decreases the net downward force on the object.
Rafael Aiguzhinov said:I wonder, what object can be drown to the deepest water ? I mean, the object where gravity is a lot more bigger than force of Archimedes