Physics, asked by sdubey446, 8 months ago

example of ship of archimedes principle​

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Answered by nilesh102
0

Answer:

1)As this is a cube, the top and bottom surfaces are identical in shape and area, and the pressure difference between the top and bottom of the cube is directly proportional to the depth difference, and the resultant force difference is exactly equal to the weight of the fluid that would occupy the volume of the cube .

in

...simple form, the Archimedes law states that the buoyant force on an object is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object. Mathematically written as: Fb = ρ x g x V. Where, Fb is the buoyant force.

2)The amount of water it displaces (shaded area) weighs as much as the ship. The weight of the ship pulling down (red arrow) and the upthrust pushing up (blue arrow) are equal and opposite forces, so the ship floats. ... Now the weight of the ship is more than the maximum possible upthrust so it sinks to the bottom

Cruise ships and other large vessels will float if they displace an amount of water equal to their mass. As the ship moves forward, the water it pushes out of the way constantly tries to fill the gap. It's this energy, from buoyant force, that keeps the ship above the surface.

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Answered by Anonymous
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