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The Body as a Draining Tank: Torricelli's Law Explains Metabolic Adaptation to Weight Loss

Submitted:

25 May 2026

Posted:

26 May 2026

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Abstract
One of the most persistent challenges in obesity research is explaining why weight loss decelerates over time, even when dietary adherence is maintained. This phenomenon, commonly called adaptive thermogenesis, is more accurately termed metabolic adaptation, as it reflects broader reductions in energy expenditure than heat production alone. Here, I propose that this phenomenon is not a distinct biological compensation, but an inevitable physical consequence of mass loss. Building on the mass balance model (MBM), I show that the rate of mass loss follows Torricelli's Law – the same principle that describes how a water tank empties. The square-root relationship arises analytically from the body surface area–mass connection and predicts weight loss trajectories during prolonged fasting without an explicit "adaptation" term. Reframing metabolic adaptation through Torricelli's Law offers a more parsimonious, first-principles explanation for one of the most robust observations in human metabolism.
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1. Introduction: The Mystery of the Slowing Scale

Weight loss is rarely linear. An initial rapid drop is almost invariably followed by a progressive deceleration that eventually plateaus – a pattern familiar to clinicians, researchers, and patients alike [1].
The standard explanation is adaptive thermogenesis: the idea that the body "defends" its weight by reducing metabolic rate beyond what lean tissue loss alone would predict [2]. The term is widely used, but imprecise. The phenomenon encompasses more than heat production; it includes reductions in resting energy expenditure, non-exercise activity thermogenesis, and the diminished energy cost of moving a lighter body [3]. A more accurate and mechanistically neutral term is metabolic adaptation. This review adopts that terminology throughout.
Conventional energy balance models (EBM) treat metabolic adaptation as an empirical correction – a parameter fitted to data after the fact [4]. This describes the trajectory of weight loss but does not explain it. The mass balance model (MBM) offers a simpler, first-principles account: metabolic adaptation is not a separate biological program, but an emergent property of mass loss itself. In fact, the body obeys a physical principle first articulated nearly 400 years ago.

2. Torricelli’s Law: A Brief Primer

In 1643, Evangelista Torricelli observed that the speed of water draining from a tank is proportional to the square root of the water's height above the hole [5]. The lower the water level, the slower the flow:
d V d t = k h
The logic is intuitive: the driving pressure decreases as the water level falls. There is no "tank adaptation" mechanism – the slowing is a direct, physical consequence of the changing state of the system.
Remarkably, the human body follows the same principle.

3. The Body as a Draining Tank

In the MBM, body mass change is governed by mass conservation [6]:
d M d t = N M I N M O
During fasting, net mass inflow (NMI) approaches zero, and the equation simplifies to:
d M d t = N M O
NMO is the body's net mass outflow: carbon exhaled as CO₂, nitrogen excreted in urine, and other losses, minus inhaled O₂. Using the well-established relationship between body surface area (SA) and mass [7]:
S A = a H M
one can show analytically that NMO must scale with the square root of body mass [8]:
N M O = k M 1 2
This is Torricelli's Law applied to the human body. The "drain" is the oxidation of macronutrients and the excretion of nitrogenous waste. The "pressure" driving mass out of the body is proportional to the metabolically active surface area, which scales as M1/2.
The mass clearance coefficient k (kg⁰·⁵/day) quantifies the efficiency of this machinery. Under stable dietary conditions, k remains constant even during moderate intake restriction [8]. During prolonged fasting, k decays toward a lower steady-state value – a genuine down-regulation of mass clearance that is itself a measurable, predictable phenomenon.

4. Empirical Validation: Fasting Data

The Torricellian MBM makes a bold, testable prediction: the weight loss trajectory during prolonged fasting should follow a square-root pattern, decelerating without an explicit metabolic adaptation term.
This prediction has been validated against two classic datasets: the 45-day fast studied by Kerndt et al. [9] and the 31-day fast of "Levanzin" documented by Benedict in 1915 [10]. In both cases, the MBM captured the early rapid phase and the later attenuated phase of weight loss with high precision. The time-dependent decay of k provided a parsimonious account of the progressive decline in mass loss rate.
The clinical implication is profound: metabolic adaptation is largely a physical necessity, not a biological mystery. The body slows down for the same reason a water tank drains more slowly as it empties.

5. Clinical Implications

This reframing has direct consequences for clinical practice.
First, metabolic adaptation is expected, not pathological. Patients should be counseled that the plateau is a physical inevitability, not a personal failure.
Second, the plateau cannot be eliminated by further restriction alone. Because mass loss rate scales as M1/2, each kilogram lost reduces the driving force for further loss. Adding exercise or restricting intake further can increase the rate temporarily but cannot abolish the square-root relationship.
Third, the MBM enables personalized prognostication. By measuring an individual's k coefficient at baseline – requiring only weight-stable NMI and body mass – clinicians can compute the expected weight loss trajectory for any prescribed reduction in mass intake. A person with a higher baseline k will lose weight faster and plateau later than someone with a lower k, even if both reduce intake by the same amount.
Fourth, diet composition matters. The mass clearance coefficient k is sensitive to macronutrient composition, not just total mass [11]. Very-low-carbohydrate ketogenic diets, for example, may produce a different k trajectory than low-fat diets matched for mass intake. This opens the door to dietary strategies that target the clearance machinery itself.

6. Conclusion

The mass balance model, grounded in Torricelli's Law, offers a parsimonious and physically elegant explanation for metabolic adaptation. The progressive decline in energy expenditure during weight loss is not a mysterious biological compensation. It is the consequence of a shrinking body, governed by the same square-root law that describes water draining from a tank.
This insight has the power to transform clinical communication and care. Instead of lamenting the body's "resistance" to weight loss, clinicians can explain that the rate of loss decelerates for the same reason a tank empties more slowly as the water level falls. The principle is simple, grounded in first-principles physics, and points toward realistic, personalized, and compassionate weight management.
The tools to measure and predict metabolic adaptation with precision now exist. The challenge ahead is to translate this physical insight into practice – and to replace the mystery of the slowing scale with the clarity of a 400-year-old fluid dynamics principle.

Author Contributions

This is a single-authored paper.

Funding

This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Acknowledgments

I would like to thank my family for their unwavering support and care, as well as my colleagues for many stimulating discussions.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

Availability of data

All data generated or analyzed during this study can be found in the sources cited in this article.

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