- #1
Richie Smash
- 293
- 15
Homework Statement
Hi I have uploaded a picture of a pressure question.
It says that there is a submarine 325 m deep, with the sea water of density 1150Kg m-3 and acceleration of gravity 10m/s and the volume of the submarine is 0.2m3 with mass 480Kg
They first ask for the upthrust.
Then they say the normal force of the sea floor against the submarine is 1800N, what is the resultant downward force?
Then they ask what mass of water must be emptied from the ballasts for the submarine to float?
Homework Equations
Pressure =pgh
Upthrust = m(fluid disaplaced) *g
The Attempt at a Solution
I know that Upthrust is equal to the density of the fluid times gravity times the volume of the object.
Thus I have worked out the upthrust on the submarine to be 2300N.
Now they ask for the resultant force.
Normally I would think it would be 1800 as well, but I realized there are more force acting downwards, the first being the weight of the submarine itself, which is 4800N, now i must subtract the upthrust from this to find the remaining downard force I believe, so I would get 2500N is what is remaining acting in the downwards direction.
So I have 1800 going upwards from the seafloor, and 2500 going downwards from the submarine, would the resultant force be 700N?
But then I have to remember the pressure of the sea acting on the submarine itself which is 375 m* g*p(of the water)
I feel I'm somewhere alng the correct lines.