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The Archimedes Principle
engineeringinsider
Now, this is the question which everyone must have pondered over
as a kid. Why something so heavy does not sink but floats, and not only floats
but also carries so much cargo at times.
Well, today we will understand why ships float! Now, everything
in this world is ruled by classical physics and so does this phenomenon.
Before we jump on to the science and math of why ships float we
have to pay some due respect to the guy because of which we have the answer to
this curious question.
That guy is Archimedes,
Archimedes was a scientist and much more. He was a genius and some people even
regarded him as being mentally retarded.
The legend has it that he was given a task by the king to
adjudge whether his crown was made up of pure gold or not.
Now Archimedes was having a bath in his bathtub and also
pondering over the task at hand.
Nobody knows what happened but somehow the movement of water in
his bathtub led him to formulate the Archimedes principle.
Archimedes Principle
Archimedes principle
states that “The upward buoyant force that is exerted on a
body immersed in a fluid, whether fully or partially submerged, is equal to the
weight of the fluid that the body displaces”
So how does it fit into this equation or our question that “why
ships float?”
It’s quite evident that when the weight of the body is less than
the weight of the fluid it displaces, then that object will float and not sink.
The game is off the volume vis weight.
For example: let us take an object which has a volume
of say 10 cubic meters and weighs 20 metric tonnes.
Put it straight in the water and see what will happen.
Naturally, it will sink as the amount of water displaced will be far more than
the volume of the object.
Now, let’s increase the volume of the object to say 20 cubic
meters keeping the weight same, again let’s throw it in water.
What will happen now is that the object will neither sink nor
float. Reason is that the amount of water displaced here is equal to the volume
of the object.
Now let’s assume we increase the volume of the object to say 30
cubic meters keeping the weight same, now we have an object that is floating in
the water due to the obvious reasons.
Same happens in case of a ship, the design of the ship is made
in such a way that the amount of water it displaces is always more than its
weight.
Hence the ships float on water. Modern ships have buoyancy
control mechanism which makes adjustments according to the laden weight of the
ship.
So, this was the answer to your curious question folks.
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