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Archimedes Principle
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Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Archimedes Principle

Page 2: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Learning Objectives

• Describe Archimedes’ Principle.

• Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity.

• Correctly calculate the buoyancy of an object in either fresh or salt water.

• Correctly solve lifting problems.

• Correctly calculate surface air volume equivalents.

Page 3: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Main Points

• Density

• Buoyancy

• Specific gravity

• Archimedes’ Principle

• Surface Equivalent air volume

• Lifting problems

Page 4: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Density

• Definition– Mass per Unit Volume

• Density of air at sea level– .08 lbs. per cu. ft.

• Hydrostatic Density– Salt Water

• 64 lbs. per cu. ft.

– Fresh Water• 62.4 lbs. per cu. ft.

Page 5: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Buoyancy

• Force that allows an object to float.

Page 6: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Specific Gravity

Density of a substance vs. density of pure

water.

Page 7: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Archimedes’ Principle

• An object partially or wholly immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.

• Buoyancy of an object = – Weight of the water displaced by the object - Weight of the object

Page 8: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

When placed in seawater, what is the state of buoyancy for each of these objects?Where will they end up?

Positive_______________________________________________

Neutral

________________________________________________Negative_

32 lbs1 cu ft

64 lbs1 cu. Ft.

96 lbs1 cu. ft

Page 9: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

States of Buoyancy

• Positive buoyancy– Specific Gravity of the object is less than that

of the fluid

• Neutral– Specific gravity of the object is equal to the

specific gravity of the fluid

• Negative– Specific gravity of the object is greater than

that of the fluid

Page 10: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Example 1

• What is the buoyancy of an anchor with a dry weight of 100 lbs., and a volume of .22 cu. ft., when it is dropped in the ocean?

Page 11: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Answer to Example 1

Displaced wt.=

.22 cu. ft. x 64 lbs. per cu. ft. 14.08 lbs.

-Dry wt.

100 lbs.

Buoyancy

- 86 lbs

Page 12: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Example 2

How many 50 lb. lift bags will it take to lift

an object with a volume of 3.1 cu. ft. and a

dry weight of 289 lbs.?

Each lift bag weighs 2 lbs. and the object is

in fresh water.

Page 13: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Answer to Example 2

Displaced weight =

3.1 cu. ft. x 62.4 lbs./ cu. ft. 193.4 lbs.

-Dry weight

289 lbs.

Buoyancy

- 95.6 lbs.

Lift capacity = 50 lbs - 2 lbs = 48 lbs of lift / bag.

Use how many bags?

2 bags.

Page 14: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Surface Equivalent Air Volume

• How much air must you bring down from the surface if the object in example 2 is located at a depth of 120 ffw?

Page 15: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Surface Equivalent Air Volume cont.

• Buoyancy of the object -95.6 lbs

• How much lifting force must be generated to lift the object to the surface?– 95.6 lbs

Page 16: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Surface Equivalent Air Volume cont.

• How much freshwater must be displaced to generate the required lifting force?

• How is this calculated?– Force required/density of fresh water

• Density of fresh water – 62.4 lbs. per cu. ft.

• 95.6 lbs/62.4 lbs. per cu. ft. =– 1.53 cu. Ft. of water must be displaced

Page 17: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Surface Equivalent Air Volume cont.

How much air must we bring down from the

surface to displace 1.53 ft3 of fresh water at

a depth of 120 ffw.?

• Calculate Pata at a depth of 120 ffw.?– {Depth + 34}/34 = atm– {120+34}/ 34 = 4.5 atm

• Multiply Pata x Vol h20 to be displaced

– 1.53 x 4.5 = 6.93 cu. ft. at the surface

Page 18: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Lifting problem

• You have been enlisted to salvage an outboard motor lost at sea. You locate the outboard, which displaces 2 ft3 of water and weighs 900 lbs in air, at a depth of 66 ft. How much air will you need to add to a lift bag to bring the outboard to the surface? How much air will be in the lift bag once at the surface?

Page 19: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Calculate the Buoyancy of the Object

Volume = 2 ft3

Weight of the water displaced = 2 ft3 x 64 lbs/ft3 = 128 lbs

Dry weight = 900 lbs

Buoyancy of the Object128 lbs – 900 lbs = -772 lbs

Page 20: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Calculate the Volume of Water to be Displaced

How much lifting force is necessary?

772 lbs

How much water must be displaced

772 lbs / 64 lbs/ft3 = 12.06 ft3

Page 21: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Calculate How Much Air You Need to Bring Down from the surface

Calculate Pata

(66 / 33) + 1 = 4 ata

Multiply P ata x volume H20 to be displaced

4 ata x 12.06 ft3 = 48.24 ft3

How much air will be in the bag at the

surface?

Page 22: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Example 3

When properly weighted for diving in the

ocean, a diver and his gear weigh 224 lbs.

How must the diver adjust the amount of

weight in his weight system to be properly

weighted in fresh water?

Page 23: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Answer to Example3The volume of the diver and his equipment will not change

SW displacement = 224 lbs./64 lbs. per cu. ft. = 3.5 cu.ft.

FW displacement = 3.5 cu. ft. x 62.4 lbs./cu. ft. = 218.4 lbs.

Wt. system Adjustment = 224 lbs.- 218.4 lbs.

Answer:Remove 5.6 lbs

Shortcut Adjust up or down by 2.5% of total diver weight.This is the difference in density between ocean water andfresh water

Page 24: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Have we covered:

• Density

• Buoyancy

• Specific gravity

• Archimedes’ Principle

• Surface Equivalent air volume

• Lifting problems

Page 25: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Can You

• Describe Archimedes’ Principle?

• Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity?

• Correctly calculate the buoyancy of an object in either fresh or salt water?

• Correctly solve a lifting problem?

• Correctly calculate Surface Air Volume Equivalents?

Page 26: Archimedes Principle. Learning Objectives Describe Archimedes’ Principle. Define density, buoyancy, and specific gravity. Correctly calculate the buoyancy.

Last Thoughts

• Understanding and applying Archimedes’ Principle enables you to weight yourself properly and to achieve and maintain the appropriate state of buoyancy.

• Combining Archimedes’ Principal with Boyle’s Law enables you to correctly calculate the volume of gas and number of lift bags you will need to bring from the surface to ensure you can lift and object off the bottom.