Floating and Sinking

n How is it possible that huge ships made of _____________________ can float easily in water?

n Yet in a few hours the same ship can become a sunken __________________ like the Titanic.

n Why does most of an iceberg lie hidden _______________________ the surface of the water?

n To answer these questions, you need to find out what makes an object ______________ and what make an object ______________________.

Comparing Densities

n One reason objects float or sink is their ________________________.

n An object that is _________________________________________ than the fluid in which it is immersed ______________________.

n An object that is _______________________________________ than the fluid in which it is immersed ____________________________ to the surface.

n If the density of an object is ____________________ to the density of the fluid in which it is immersed, the object neither rises nor sinks in the fluid; it ______________________________

____________________________________________.

Floating and Sinking

n Now you know why __________________ sinks: it is several times ________________ than water.

n __________________________, which is less dense than water, _____________________.

n Is an ice cube more or less dense than water?

Iceberg straight ahead!

n An ice cube _________________ in water because the density of ice is ___________________ than the density of water.

n But it’s just a ________________________________!

n So most of a floating ice cube is __________________________________________________.

n Since an iceberg is really a very large ice cube, the part that you see above water is only a _________________________________________________of the entire iceberg.

n This is one reason why icebergs are so dangerous to ships.

Buoyant Force

n If you have ever picked up an object under water, you know that it seems _________________ in water than in air.

n Water exerts a force called ____________________________ that acts on a submerged object.

n Buoyant force acts in the __________________________ direction, against the force of gravity, so it makes an object feel ______________________________.

Weight vs. Buoyant Force

n There is always a _______________________________ force on a submerged object.

n That force is the _______________________ of the object.

n If the weight of the object is __________________________ than the buoyant force, the object will ___________________.

n If the weight of the object is _________________ than the buoyant force, the object will begin to ________________

n What can you infer about the weight and buoyant force from the last picture?

Archimedes’ Principle

n You know that Archimedes discovered that a submerged object displaces, ________________

_________________________________________, a volume of fluid equal to its own volume.

n Using this idea, Archimedes came up with a principle that relates _______________________

___________________________a submerged object ______________________to the __________________________________________________on the object.

n It states that the buoyant force on an object is _____________________________ the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.

n Therefore, the ________________________________ an object ________________________, the ________________________________________________________________ it will have.

n The more ______________________________ an object occupies, the more water is displaces.

n This is why it is easier to float in water when you are __________________________________ on your back – you take up __________________ surface area, displacing ____________ water, therefore creating a ________________________ buoyant force.

Floating by changing mass

n Changing the density of an object can make it _______________________________ in a given fluid.

n Even though you cannot change the density of an individual substance, you can change the overall density of things that are made of ____________________________________.

n Submarines can change their overall _____________________, and therefore their density to allow them to float and sink.

n They do this by filling or releasing water from their ________________________________.

n When water is pumped _______________ of its flotation tanks, the overall mass of the submarine __________________________.

n Since the volume remains the same, its density __________________________________ when its mass ______________________________.

n So the submarine will _____________________ to the surface.

n What do you think a submarine does in order to sink?

n To dive, the submarine _______________________________________________.

n In this way, it _______________________________________ (and thus its density) and sinks!

n Most ships are also designed to alter their overall density.

n The _________________ (bottom part) of a ship contains a large volume of _____________.

n This air reduces the ship’s overall __________________________, and therefore its density, and helps it to float.

Floating by changing volume

n Another way of changing density is to change __________________.

n If the mass is kept the same, ________________________________ the volume of a substance, will ________________________________ its density.

n Increasing the ___________________________________ of a substance, will also increase its _________________________________________.

n This is because the ___________________________________ of water displaced, the ___________________________________________________ (Archimedes Principle).

n The ____________________________ of a ship causes it to displace a greater volume of water than a solid piece of steel of the same mass because it has a greater surface area.

n The ______________________water it displaces, the easier it will float!

n A ship stays afloat as long as the buoyant force is _________________________ its weight.