| > Why does it not balance in water? Technically, it doesn't balance an air either, but it's just harder to notice the effect. For an exaggerated example, imagine a 1-kg cube of styrofoam and another 1-kg cube of steel, each placed on opposite trays of a balance-scale. The scale will be truly balanced in vacuum, and in air will appear balanced to the unaided human eye. However when you submerge the entire system underwater, the differences will be shockingly visible... especially when the styrofoam floats up and off the scale entirely! It isn't because of negative mass or negative weight, just buoyancy that can no longer be ignored. By conducting the "weighing" experiment again in a denser fluid (water) any subtle differences in density/ displacement become easier to measure. |
The trick being described has the weigher balance the scale in air, with unknown mass A and some mass of gold B. The two sides are equal in weight in air, different from mass. Then the entire balance system is submerged. The difference in density of A and B, and therefor volume, leads the balance to become unbalanced.
It would be wise to add mass to the lighter side to try and measure how imbalanced. I would bet most adulterants are about half the density of gold or less. In g/cm3: Gold is 19.3, silver 10.5, lead 11.3, copper 9.0, nickel 8.9.