Transcription of Buoyancy - cns.gatech.edu
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5 Buoyancy Buoy mostly pronounced booe , probably of Germanicorigin. A tethered floatingobject used to mark a loca-tion in the , whales, submarines, balloons and airships all owe their ability to float tobuoyancy, the lifting power of water and air. The understanding of the physicsof Buoyancy goes back as far as antiquity and has probably sprung from theinterest in ships and shipbuilding in classic Greece. The basic principle is dueto archimedes . His famous Law states that the Buoyancy force on a body isequal and oppositely directed to the weight of the fluid that the body the Law was not just one law, but a set of four propositions dealing withdifferent configurations of body and liquid [7]. Before his time one had thoughtthat the shape of a body determined whether it would sink or Syracuse archimedes (287 212 BC).
BUOYANCY 5.1 Archimedes’ principle Mechanical equilibrium takes a slightly different form than global hydrostatic equilibrium (4-15) when a body of another material is immersed in a fluid. If its material is incompressible, the body retains its shape and displaces an amount of
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