Why would there be a force acting to push things up from the surface, if there’s a force acting to pull things down to the surface?
As already explained in 2 different ways.
Firstly, the simple way:
They are in a fluid.
This fluid is trying to go down.
The only way for this fluid to go down is to push the other object up.
This is like 2 kids on a see saw.
The heavier one goes down, while the lighter one goes up.
In addition, the weight of the heavier one is reduced by the weight of the lighter one (if you try to measure them while on the see-saw by measuring the force between the seesaw and the ground, assuming it gets that low).
The same happens in a fluid.
The object immersed in a fluid, has its weight reduced by the weight of the fluid displaced.
If that fluid is heavier, the object is pushed up.
You can't have both the fluid and the object go down. One has to go down, while the other goes up.
Again, so simple a child could understand.
But apparently, it is beyond your comprehension.
Is that because you are a complete imbecile so heavily brain damaged you can't understand such simple things?
Or do you fully understand and just refuse to accept it and instead choose to lie to everyone like the lying POS you are?
Or the more complex version:
The fluid is being pulled down by gravity.
This compresses the layer of fluid below, pressurising it which in turn pushes the upper layer back up to support it.
Then the layer below must apply a force to the next layer down for both its weight, and the weight of the fluid above.
This creates a pressure gradient, where the pressure is greater the lower down you are.
If you place an object in this fluid, the pressure gradient means the force of the fluid pushing up from below is greater than the force from the fluid pushing down from above. This results in an upwards force on the object from the fluid.
To reject this, you need to reject one or both of 2 things:
1 - the existence of the pressure gradient.
This is not simply objecting to the above explanation of why a pressure gradient exists, but actually objecting to its existence. This is quite problematic, because this is an empirically verifiable fact. A fact that planes rely upon to do things like measure their altitude. So rejecting this just shows wilful rejection of reality and a desperate attempt by you to cling to a fantasy.
2 - That a pressure gradient would push objects from the region of high pressure to the region of low pressure. Again, this is quite easy to demonstrate fact. It is the basic principle of how firearms work, and pneumatic systems.
Why would ‘buoyancy’ happen to be the exact same objects with less density than air and water in both cases? It must be an amazing coincidence that their relative density is the deciding factor all the time for both mediums!
Because gravity is a force proportional to mass.
i.e. the very thing you hate.
Because of this, the pressure gradient, assuming g and rho remain constant is given by dP=g*rho_fluid*h.
This is because it depends on the weight of the fluid.
If you then take an object (assumed to be a prism for simplicity) with cross sectional area A and height h, and place it in this fluid, this pressure gradient pushes upwards with a force of dP*A.
i.f. F_b = g*rho_fluid*h*A = g*rho_fluid*V.
and the downwards force of gravity is simply F_g=g*m = g*rho_obj*V
So the net force is:
F_n=g*rho_obj*V - g*rho_fluid*V
F_n = g*V*(rho_obj - rho_fluid).
Not an amazing cooincidence.
A simple fact directly expected from the fact that gravity is a force proportional to mass.
Or how about admitting it’s convoluted worthless bs for once? Because a shirt pile of stupid excuses aren’t going to help this fairy tale anymore
You mean your posts? Your pathetic excuses and fairy tale?
Again, the pressure gradient is real, demonstrable, measurable, verifiable fact.
The resulting force from it is trivial to work out.
And then measuring objects shows that as that well as that upwards force from buoyancy, you need a downwards force proportional to the mass of the object.
Right, things with less mass than air are pulled to the surface by your first made up force, which cannot pull down all the air which has almost no density , while it pulls down gazillion tons of water in the oceans no problem.
No, everything is pulled down. But it is not magic.
It can't just magically increase the force to pull things down when other forces act against it.
If it could, everything would be a black hole.
Instead, things rest upon other things.
The water rests upon the surface instead of magically pushing its way through or occupying the same volume.
Each layer supports the layer above. And the same thing happens with air.
You could even imagine a hypothetical world with almost no atmosphere.
Now the air is acting more like a collection of particles than a gas.
These particles, with lots of energy, will fall towards this planet due to gravity, and bounce of the surface.
And they will keep doing that, with virtually no air pressure.
Then if you add more in, you increase the chance for a collision.
Now an air particle can fall down and hit another one, causing it to head back down faster.
This is increasing the pressure.
And it is that pressure which keeps the air above.
Again, if you analyse it honestly (and with intelligence you apparently don't have), it all makes sense.
And you are yet to show any actual fault.
all is solved with two made up bs forces just like that!
No, unlike you we don't need to make up forces.
Instead, this rising and falling of objects is explained by 1 force, gravity. A very real and demonstrable force which you can demonstrate exists yourself but choose not to because it isn't compatible with your delusional fantasy.
A force which both acts directly on the object to try to pull it down, and on the fluid the object is in, trying to pull the fluid down, which creates a pressure gradient which pushes the object up.
This resulting force is often known as buoyancy, but this is not some magic separate extra force. This force is a direct result of gravity and the fluid being supported at the base.
And this force of buoyancy is certainly not made up.
Again, even if you want to reject gravity because your delusional fantasy can't work with it, the pressure gradient which is the buoyant force is easy to demonstrate exists and is quite well documented and relied upon for things like altimeters in planes.
There is no way out of it without rejecting so much of reality it isn't funny.
Do you see the surface past your ‘dip’?
Has nothing to do with the topic at hand.
Can you try explaining the pressure gradient? Or you going to claim it doesn't exist?
Can you explain what causes it?
Can you explain why it shouldn't push things up?
Or can you only continue with this pathetic childish wilful rejection of reality?