Final answer:
The water displaced by a boat 4.0 m wide, 8.0 m long, 3.0 m deep, with 1.0 m above water, is 64.0 m³. The load the boat can carry, given that it weighs 8.60×10´ N in dry dock and with a water weight density of 9800 N/m³, is 5.41×10µ N.
Step-by-step explanation:
The problem described pertains to the concept of buoyant force as defined by Archimedes' principle, which states that the buoyant force on an object submerged in a fluid is equal to the weight of the fluid that the object displaces. The student's question involves calculating the water displaced by a boat and the load it can carry.
Calculating Water Displacement and Load
(a) To find the water displaced by the boat, we can calculate the submerged volume of the boat: 4.0 m (width) × 8.0 m (length) × 2.0 m (submerged depth) = 64.0 m³ of water.
(b) To find the load the boat can contain, we first need to determine the weight of the water displaced using the weight density of water (9800 N/m³). The weight of the water displaced is therefore 64.0 m³ × 9800 N/m³ = 6.272×10µ N. The maximum load the boat can carry without sinking is this value minus the weight of the empty boat (8.60×10´ N), so the boat can carry an additional load of 6.272×10µ N - 8.60×10´ N = 5.41×10µ N.