When you flood the cylinder it displaces less water.
Why?
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When you flood the cylinder it displaces less water.
Because the inside is not displacing water.
It's about the density of what's in the tank in comparison to the surrounding water. Sea water in the tank is the same density as the water outside the tank. Only the tank material has a different density that impacts buoyancy.I see. So a cylinder filled with water displaces less water than a cylinder filled with mercury?
I believe he meant that the inside of a flooded cylinder does not displace any water once it’s flooded and open to the surrounding water....I see. So a cylinder filled with water displaces less water than a cylinder filled with mercury?
It's about the density of what's in the tank in comparison to the surrounding water. Sea water in the tank is the same density as the water outside the tank. Only the tank material has a different density that impacts buoyancy.
What is "zero buoyancy"?Any volume only generates buoyancy when it is filled with something lighter than the surrounding medium that is displaced. When the cylinder is flooded, the light stuff (air) is lost and replaced by the same type of matter that is displaced (water). The buoyancy of the volume that is flooded thus goes to zero.