Which is easier to lift? A small stone or an
entire ship? A small stone won't float (unless
you cheat and use pumice) even if it isn't very
heavy, yet a huge oil tanker that is too heavy
to pick up floats easily.
Surely the heaviest one should
sink
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Try this...
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Take a piece of aluminium foil
and split it into 2 identically sized pieces
(with approximately the same weight).
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Take one of the pieces and roll
it into a tight, very compact, ball. Take the
other piece and fold it into a flat shallow
boat shape.
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PREDICT: Ask your students
"What will happen when I place these two
into this sink (or tub) of water?"
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OBSERVE: Watch what happens,
remembering they have the same weight, when
carefully placed onto the surface of the water.
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EXPLAIN: What does this
show us? (seniors might like to consider the
area of the ball and boat in contact with the
water)
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Which one floats and which one sinks? Can
you explain what you are looking at? It all works on the
idea of buoyancy. Buoyancy is the loss in weight
an object seems to undergo when placed in a liquid, as
compared to its weight in air.
Archimedes was a man who lived centuries
ago who figured out that an object fully or partly immersed
in a liquid is buoyed upward by a force equal to the weight
of the liquid pushed aside (displaced) by that object.
A floating object pushes aside (displaces) an amount of
liquid equal to its own weight.
The upshot of all this is that the foil
boat pushes aside more water, as a larger area is in contact
with the water compared to the foil ball. Even a ship
with a hull made of concrete will float if the area of
the object that makes contact with the water is large
enough.
The ship is exerting a downward force
on the water and the buoyancy of the water is exerting
a upward force on the object. As long as the forces
remain equal the ship will float. Put too much cargo on
board and the downward force is greater... the ship sinks!