About DBIS   | Story archive  |  DBIS home

Underwater Weather Watchers

Oceanographers, Physicists Design Submersible Floats For Eyeing Ocean Weather

January 1, 2005

Researchers are now collecting valuable information about ocean weather from a fleet of cost-effective instruments called Argo floats. Using hydraulic fluid in internal and external sacs, each float sinks about a mile and a half underwater. Every ten days, the float rises to the surface and transmits information on the ocean temperature and salt content. Researchers hope Argo will improve the ability to forecast the paths of hurricanes and where they will make their landfall.

Why do some objects float and others sink?

Science behind the news is funded by a generous grant from the NSF

Legend has it that around 200 B.C., the Greek philosopher Archimedes took the first step to determine why objects float. Archimedes noticed as he was getting into his bath that when he sat down, water flowed over the sides of the tub. His weight had moved, or "displaced," it. He concluded that water pushes upward with a force equal to the object's weight.

When an object is floating, part of it is under the water; how much of it is underwater depends its weight. For instance, if a boat weighs 1,000 pounds, it will sink into the water until it has displaced 1,000 pounds of water. The object will float unless it is too heavy to push away enough water equal to its own weight and still have part of itself above the water.

But weight is not the primary factor in determining whether something will float. After all, big ships are very heavy, yet they stay afloat. It all comes down to an object's density: Objects with lower density will float more easily than objects of higher density. The density of the liquid is also a factor.

A boat may weigh 1,000 pounds, but it is not solid steel throughout: Much of its interior is air. So the average density of a boat is very light compared to the average density of water. Filling the boat with heavy rocks will increase its density, and eventually the boat will sink when its density becomes greater than that of the water.

The American Geophysical Union contributed to the TV portion of this report.

Latest stories

Did you know?...

  • Around 1620 an inventor named Cornelius van Drebbel built an underwater boat that legend says was rowed underwater, carrying paying customers 12 feet below the surface of London's river Thames.
  • Air is a gas and water is a liquid, but in physics, both are classified as fluids. A fluid is best described as any substance that takes the shape of the vessel containing it.
  • More information on this story

    Martha J. Heil
    mheil@aip.org
    American Institute of Physics
    Tel: 301-209-3088