I feel I need to address this claim. If I have a high pressure water hose and I point the flow at someone, they'll get knocked off their feet and bowled along. But the water will also bounce back off their bodies towards me. That sounds like a liquid reaction force to me.
I'm not sure anything can experience no reaction force, that seems to break Newton's 3rd.
The Wikipedia entry on buoyancy you referred me to says: "upthrust, is an upward force exerted by a fluid that opposes the weight of a partially or fully immersed object."
That sure sounds like Newton's 3rd to me.
If I'm floating in space and I have a bag filled with water and I push it away from me, I'll accelerate in the opposite direction. Me and the water experiencing equal and opposite forces. And isn;t that how a rocket works in space? A chemical reaction results in a high speed flow of gas. The gas and the spacecraft accelerate in opposite directions as a result of Newton's 3rd - essentially the rocket and the exhaust push each other apart.
That same wikipedia article also says: * "In a column of fluid, pressure increases with depth as a result of the weight of the overlying fluid. Thus the pressure at the bottom of a column of fluid is greater than at the top of the column. Similarly, the pressure at the bottom of an object submerged in a fluid is greater than at the top of the object. The pressure difference results in a net upward force on the object. "*
It claims this is an explanation but it seems incomplete to me. Let me break it down:
- In a column of fluid, pressure increases with depth as a result of the weight of the overlying fluid. *
Agreed
- Thus the pressure at the bottom of a column of fluid is greater than at the top of the column. *
** I would actually word this differently:
The pressure exerted downwards at the top of a column of fluid is less than the pressure exerted downwards at the bottom of the column" but otherwise agree. **
- "Similarly, the pressure at the bottom of an object submerged in a fluid is greater than at the top of the object. The pressure difference results in a net upward force on the object." *
** Assuming the object is a rigid solid object, this bit I find confusing.
Why does the bottom of the object exert a greater downward pressure than the top of the object? There is no water in between the top of the object and the bottom of the object, just the body of the object itself.
What this seems to me to be trying to imply is that the difference in pressure at the top and bottom of the object has nothing to do with the column of water the object is supporting or the column of water below it that it is resting on, but is caused by the material of the body itself between its top and bottom surfaces. To me this will be the case irrespective of what depth the body is at, which implies buoyancy has little to do with the depth of the water and a lot to do with height of the object. **
ps
The bolding and italics in this editor stop working after the first para
EDIT
Ok, so I have a new formulation:
-
The force that a submerged body feels on its top surface is the weight of the column of water above it
-
The force the top surface of the column of water below the submerged object feels is 1) above plus the additional force that comes from the weight of the submerged object itself. This is greater than 1) above This implies the water column above and the object itself should be treated as a single composite object.
-
The upwards thrust the bottom surface of the submerged object feels is simply the reaction force (Newton III) the top surface of the column of water below the submerged object exerts on the bottom surface of the submerged body. Therefore the upthrust is equal to the downwards force of the water above the object plus the downwards force of the object itself.
Something about this formulation feels more realistic to me.
Although we still have the problem that with this formulation, the downwards force of the combined water column + object is always equal to the upwards thrust of the water below the object which means the object is always in a static position at any depth, never sinking or rising. This is clearly counterfactual so something is missing or just plain wrong. I still have this vague sense that the something missing has to do with the object having to push the underlying water out of the way to make space for itself. Hmmm. Tricky.
ps
What you are seeing here is reasoning happening in real time. Not very good reasoning, admittedly, but you could regard it as a spectator sport....
pps
I seem to recall something Einstein said. Something about he got very confused and muddled when thinking things through. It didn't come easily. So he had to develop a very disciplined step by step approach to thinking, carefully defining each element and examining it very closely for consistency. I'd like to think I had some kind of kinship with Einstein's methods.
A kind of very stupid version of Einstein. Einstein as a dunce...