This question arised during a discussion with a friend, when I discovered that he cannot do the dead man's (or jellyfish) float, i.e. float horizontally on the water, not even when he was a child. Basically, he sinks by his feet and he floats with just his head, immersed in the water at a 45-60 degrees angle. His point was: "My body is just not made for it". My point was:"You never learned properly, at least as a child you should have been able to!". So, as he argued that the laws of nature were against him, I began to dig a bit into the physics of the dead mans's float.
I think that, a part from the magnitude of the vectors at play, a major factor comes from their point of application. Indeed, while the center of mass, where the weight vector that pulls you down is applied, is located more or less towards your hips, the bouyant vector is applied at the center of bouyancy, located more or less in your lungs. To do the dead man's float the two centers must be aligned. If this is not the case, you will rotate in the water until the two centers are on the same vertical, and only at this point you will reach equilibrium. This is what happens to him, I guess. So he was right.
My conclusion is: To make my friend do the dead man's float, we should move his center of mass towards his center of bouyancy, by making him lift his arms or spread his legs. And be sure that his lungs are full, so that his diaphragm is in a lower position and his center of bouyancy is as towards the center of mass as possible. First question: Did I get this part right?
I have a problem on all of this though. I thought: "well, if I can use physics to make him float, I can make myself unstable so that I rotate in the water using the same principle". So yesterday I went to the sea and tried to test some things. My idea was: if I'm doing the dead man's float, the two centers are aligned. So I will put myself in that condition, and then change a bit the volume of my lungs and the position of my center of mass, so to sink by the head or by the feet. I wanted to test if I got the physics right. My attempts:
I tried to empty a bit my lungs, so to move my center of bouyancy from my center of mass, and sink by the feet. But nothing happens.
If I completely empty my lungs, I sink. But I don't rotate, I just sink vertically, and I guess my centers are still vertically aligned, but the magnitude of the bouyant force is not enough anymore.
If I lift my arms and spread my legs, my center of mass should move upwards, away from my center of bouyancy, and I should rotate by sinking with my head. This doesn't happen. In this step I tried to keep my breathing as steady as possible, and in some occasions I completely filled my lungs and kept the air in, so to fix the position of my center of bouyancy, while moving my arms and legs to move my center of mass. Still, I don't sink.
I approached this problem with "How can I make my friend float?", but now I also have the reverse question "How can I make myself sink??". Is there something that I didn't take into account in the physics of this process? Maybe I oversimplified things? Of course what I did is a bit "empiric", as I cannot precisely control the volume of my lungs. But nevertheless, I was expecting to find a configuration in which I could sink, by the head or feet. But I just always float like a wooden plank, no matter what I do (except if I completely empty my lungs of course). Is there a reason for that? Given what I understood about the physics, for me it doesn't make sense. I will give it another shot in the next days in any case, so if you have some additional suggestions I haven't think of I will gladly take them.
EDIT: As the user Bob D pointed out, I should have used "center of gravity" instead of "center of mass"