joe_gunn
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Dear Friends,
I have a problem that has been driving me nuts for months now, and I am hoping you guys can help. I need to understand whether:
1. The Force with which a hollow, buoyant Steel Sphere is propelled upwards from under water at significant depth changes as the sphere ascends to higher elevations closer to the water surface? It seems counter-intuitive to me that the force exerted on the sphere 3 meters below the water surface, is identical to the force a 1000 meters below surface? My intuition tells me that due to higher pressures at the bottom, the force and therefore the rate of ascension should be greater at the bottom? If not, why not?
2. If I build a second hollow sphere of identical surface volume (yet different skin thickness – internal volume), but ensure that its internal gas pressure is say hundreds or thousands of times greater, will it ascend faster with greater force than the first sphere? After all, that extra pressure is not “visible” outside the skin of the sphere?
I understand that spheres must have a lower mass to volume ratio than water to be buoyant, however, to know the internal pressure exactly will demand a sensor, machining of a new opening, seals/gaskets (thus compromising further the integrity of the sphere and $$$). On the other hand, if I over-pressurize (for sufficient buoyancy) by filling it with say, dry ice, by the time all the ice sublimates to gas, the sphere will be at the bottom ready to surface; once manually triggered to do so. If my intuition is wrong, and if both spheres ascend at the same rate regardless of internal pressure, then all I need to do is machine the sphere to ensure minimal buoyancy, allow air to enter before closure and ignore the dry ice and pressure sensors.
Please disregard underwater temperature gradients, water densities, currents, and salinity issues.
Many thanks for your help.
I have a problem that has been driving me nuts for months now, and I am hoping you guys can help. I need to understand whether:
1. The Force with which a hollow, buoyant Steel Sphere is propelled upwards from under water at significant depth changes as the sphere ascends to higher elevations closer to the water surface? It seems counter-intuitive to me that the force exerted on the sphere 3 meters below the water surface, is identical to the force a 1000 meters below surface? My intuition tells me that due to higher pressures at the bottom, the force and therefore the rate of ascension should be greater at the bottom? If not, why not?
2. If I build a second hollow sphere of identical surface volume (yet different skin thickness – internal volume), but ensure that its internal gas pressure is say hundreds or thousands of times greater, will it ascend faster with greater force than the first sphere? After all, that extra pressure is not “visible” outside the skin of the sphere?
I understand that spheres must have a lower mass to volume ratio than water to be buoyant, however, to know the internal pressure exactly will demand a sensor, machining of a new opening, seals/gaskets (thus compromising further the integrity of the sphere and $$$). On the other hand, if I over-pressurize (for sufficient buoyancy) by filling it with say, dry ice, by the time all the ice sublimates to gas, the sphere will be at the bottom ready to surface; once manually triggered to do so. If my intuition is wrong, and if both spheres ascend at the same rate regardless of internal pressure, then all I need to do is machine the sphere to ensure minimal buoyancy, allow air to enter before closure and ignore the dry ice and pressure sensors.
Please disregard underwater temperature gradients, water densities, currents, and salinity issues.
Many thanks for your help.
person walking/floating this earth. I am grateful for the fine explanations and your amazing quantity of your patience with me. It would take me months to go through all the books necessary to finally understand this. Don't get me wrong, I love books, it's just that my expertise is in telecommunications and optics - I never had this underwater stuff in undergrad or grad school. The cancellation of NET horizontal forces is what finally did it for me, leaving the top and bottom planes only as the relevant surfaces! The basic math of course is always beautiful icing on the cake. Russ, thanks for the critical velocity & drag explanation; once I correlated this to same effects in the atmosphere it made much more sense. Lastly, I suppose what Sophiecentaur could be referring to, is the experiment they conducted by sinking a Styrofoam mannequin head to a great depth only to retrieve the same head shrunken by like 40%. Many thanks again and if I can be of any help regarding fiber-optics or engineering, please holler!