Determining Ball Density and Volume (Archimedes' principle)
Finding Density and Volume of a Submerged Ball Using Kinetic Energy and Buoyancy
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to determine a submerged ball’s density (ρ_ball) and volume (V) by analyzing how its kinetic energy (K) changes with the liquid density (ρ_liq). This combines Archimedes’ principle with the work–energy theorem using clear physical reasoning
What You’ll Learn
- Identify the forces acting on a submerged object: weight and buoyant force
- Relate net force and work to kinetic energy change
- Interpret a K vs. ρ_liq graph to find where the ball and fluid densities match
- Calculate the ball’s volume from the intercept on the K-axis
- Convert between units: g/cm³ ↔ kg/m³, cm ↔ m
- Apply buoyancy and energy concepts in experimental-style problems
Key Concepts Covered
- Archimedes’ principle (buoyant force F_b = ρ_liq V g)
- Work–energy theorem (W = ΔK)
- Net force in fluids: (ρ_ball − ρ_liq) V g
- Linear graph interpretation: slope, intercept, and zero crossing
- Neutral buoyancy (ρ_ball = ρ_liq)
- Unit conversions and physical reasonableness
- Data interpretation from graphs
Why This Lesson Matters
In AP, IB, and JEE physics, graph-based data problems are common. Understanding how to extract physical quantities like density and volume from simple linear relationships is an essential lab and exam skill — helping you interpret real experimental data with confidence.
Prerequisite or Follow-Up Lessons
- Before: Archimedes’ Principle & Buoyancy
- After: Work–Energy Theorem in Fluids
Full Lesson: Determining Density and Volume from K vs. ρ_liq Graph
1) Forces Acting on the Ball
When the small solid ball is fully submerged:
- Weight (downward): W = ρ_ball × V × g
- Buoyant force (upward): F_b = ρ_liq × V × g
Thus, the net force on the ball is:
F_net = (ρ_ball − ρ_liq) × V × g
The direction of this force is downward when the ball is denser than the liquid (ρ_ball > ρ_liq).
2) Work and Energy Relationship
The ball starts from rest (K_initial = 0) and moves a distance x = 4.0 cm = 0.040 m while submerged.
From the work–energy theorem:
Work done by the net force = Change in kinetic energy
So,
K = F_net × x
K = (ρ_ball − ρ_liq) × V × g × x
This equation shows a linear relationship between K and ρ_liq:
- Slope: −V × g × x
- Vertical intercept: K when ρ_liq = 0 → K(0) = ρ_ball × V × g × x
- Zero crossing (K = 0): occurs when ρ_liq = ρ_ball (neutral buoyancy)
(a) Finding the Density of the Ball
From the provided K vs. ρ_liq graph, the kinetic energy becomes zero when
ρ_liq = 1.5 g/cm³
This means at that point, buoyant force equals the ball’s weight (no net force, no acceleration).
Therefore,
Density of the ball:
ρ_ball = 1.5 g/cm³ = 1500 kg/m³
(b) Finding the Volume of the Ball
At ρ_liq = 0, the intercept on the graph corresponds to
K = K(0) = 1.60 J
From the equation:
K(0) = ρ_ball × V × g × x
Rearranging for V:
V = K(0) / (ρ_ball × g × x)
Now substitute the known values:
K(0) = 1.60 J
ρ_ball = 1500 kg/m³
g = 9.8 m/s²
x = 0.040 m
V = 1.60 / (1500 × 9.8 × 0.040)
V ≈ 2.72 × 10⁻³ m³
Volume of the ball: V ≈ 2.72 × 10⁻³ m³
3) Quick Sanity Check
If the ball is roughly spherical,
V = (4/3)πr³ → r ≈ 0.087 m or about 8.7 cm radius (17 cm diameter).
That’s a reasonable size for a small solid sphere.
4) Key Insights
- When K = 0, net force = 0 → ρ_ball = ρ_liq (neutral buoyancy point).
- When ρ_liq = 0, all buoyant effects vanish → K(0) depends only on the ball’s own weight.
- The straight-line relationship between K and ρ_liq makes it easy to read both the density and the volume from one plot.
Final Answers
- (a) Density of the ball: ρ_ball = 1.5 g/cm³ = 1500 kg/m³
- (b) Volume of the ball: V = 2.72 × 10⁻³ m³
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