Engineering Asked by doctorremulac3 on April 22, 2021
I understand that an object, say a closed plastic cube full of air, stuck to the bottom of an aquarium with a smooth glass bottom will not float if you firmly place it such that no water can get underneath. What if you change the shape such that you add surfaces that water CAN get under to provide lift? Take the cube and change it into a T shape for instance. Now the horizontal part at the top DOES have area under which water can provide lift. Will this break the suction holding the bottom of the T to the bottom of the aquarium and cause it to float?
In the majority of the scenarios (material type, thickness of walls, width of T flannges etc) the difference on pressure in the flanges will be greater that the adhesive force keeping it to the bottom.
Answered by NMech on April 22, 2021
let's annotate the following
The trapezoid areas of the pressure on the sides cancel out.
when $ rho.g.(D+H)2B geq m+rho .g.D.L$ the buoyancy will float the object.
.
Answered by kamran on April 22, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Questions
Recent Answers
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP