PHY PHYSICS 231 Lecture 21: Buoyancy and Fluid Motion Remco Zegers Walk-in hour: Tue 4-5 pm Helproom
PHY Previously Solids: Young’s modulus Shear modulus Bulk modulus Also fluids P=F/A (N/m 2 =Pa) F pressure-difference = PA =M/V (kg/m 3 ) General: Pascal’s principle: a change in pressure applied to a fluid that is enclosed is transmitted to the whole fluid and all the walls of the container that hold the fluid.
PHY Pascal’s principle Pascal’s principle: a change in pressure applied to a fluid that is enclosed is transmitted to the whole fluid and all the walls of the container that hold the fluid. HOLDS FOR A FLUID FULLY ENCLOSED ONLY
PHY Pascal’s principle In other words then before: a change in pressure applied to a fluid that is enclosed in transmitted to the whole fluid and all the walls of the container that hold the fluid. P=F 1 /A 1 =F 2 /A 2 If A 2 >>A 1 then F 2 >>F 1. So, if we apply a small force F 1, we can exert a very large Force F 2. Hydraulic press demo
PHY Pressure vs Depth Horizontal direction: P 1 =F 1 /A P 2 =F 2 /A F 1 =F 2 (no net force) So, P 1 =P 2 Vertical direction: F top =P atm A F bottom =P bottom A-Mg=P bottom A- gAh Since the column of water is not moving: F top -F bottom =0 P atm A=P bottom A- gAh P bottom =P atm + gh
PHY Pressure and Depth: P depth=h =P depth=0 + gh Where: P depth=h : the pressure at depth h P depth=0 : the pressure at depth 0 =density of the liquid g=9.81 m/s 2 h=depth P depth=0 =P atmospheric =1.013x10 5 Pa = 1 atm =760 Torr From Pascal’s principle: If P 0 changes then the pressures at all depths changes with the same value.
PHY A submarine A submarine is built in such a way that it can stand pressures of up to 3x10 6 Pa (approx 30 times the atmospheric pressure). How deep can it go?
PHY Does the shape of the container matter? NO!!
PHY Pressure measurement. The open-tube manometer. The pressure at A and B is the same: P=P 0 + gh so h=(P-P 0 )/( g) If the pressure P=1.01 atm, what is h? (the liquid is water) h=(1.01-1)*(1.0E+05)/(1.0E+03*9.81)= =0.1 m
PHY Pressure Measurement: the mercury barometer P 0 = mercury gh mercury =13.6E+03 kg/m 3 mercury,specific =13.6
PHY Pressures at same heights are the same P0P0 P=P 0 + gh h P0P0 h h
PHY Buoyant force: B h top h bottom P top =P 0 + w gh top P bottom =P 0 + w gh bottom p= w g(h top -h bottom ) F/A= w g h F= w g hA= gV B= w gV=M water g F g =w=M obj g If the object is not moving: B=F g so: w gV=M obj g P0P0 - Archimedes (287 BC) principle: the magnitude of the buoyant force is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object
PHY Comparing densities B= fluid gV Buoyant force w=M object g= object gV Stationary: B=w object = fluid If object > fluid the object goes down! If object < fluid the object goes up!
PHY A floating object h A B w w=M object g= object V object g B=weight of the fluid displaced by the object =M water,displaced g = water V displaced g = water hAg h: height of the object under water! The object is floating, so there is no net force (B=w): object V object = water V displaced h= object V object /( water A) only useable if part of the object is above the water!!
PHY question ?? N 10N of water inside thin hollow sphere A hollow sphere with negligible weight if not filled, is filled with water and hung from a scale. The weight is 10 N. It is then submerged. What is the weight read from the scale? a)0 N b)5 N c)10 N d)20 N e)impossible to tell
PHY An example ?? N 1 kg of water inside thin hollow sphere A) ?? N 7 kg iron sphere of the same dimension as in A) B) Two weights of equal size and shape, but different mass are submerged in water. What are the weights read out?
PHY Another one An air mattress 2m long 0.5m wide and 0.08m thick and has a mass of 2.0 kg. A) How deep will it sink in water? B) How much weight can you put on top of the mattress before it sinks? water =1.0E+03 kg/m 3
equation of continuity A1,1A1,1 A2,2A2,2 v1v1 v2v2 1 2 the mass flowing into area 1 ( M 1 ) must be the same as the mass flowing into area 2 ( M 2 ), else mass would accumulate in the pipe). M 1 = M 2 1 A 1 x 1 = 2 A 2 x 2 (M= V= Ax) 1 A 1 v 1 t = 2 A 2 v 2 t ( x=v t) 1 A 1 v 1 = 2 A 2 v 2 if is constant (liquid is incompressible) A 1 v 1 =A 2 v 2 x1x1 x2x2
PHY Bernoulli’s equation W 1 =F 1 x 1 =P 1 A 1 x 1 =P 1 V W 2 =-F 2 x 2 =-P 2 A 2 x 2 =-P 2 V Net Work=P 1 V-P 2 V m: transported fluid mass same KE=½mv 2 2 -½mv 1 2 & PE=mgy 2 -mgy 1 W fluid = KE+ PE P 1 V-P 2 V=½mv 2 2 -½mv mgy 2 -mgy 1 use =M/V and div. By V P 1 -P 2 =½ v 2 2 -½ v gy 2 - gy 1 P 1 +½ v gy 1 = P 2 +½ v gy 2 P+½ v 2 + gy=constant P: pressure ½ v 2 :kinetic Energy per unit volume gy: potential energy per unit volume Another conservation Law
PHY Moving cans P0P0 P0P0 Top view Before air is blown in between the cans, P 0 =P 1 ; the cans remain at rest and the air in between the cans is at rest (0 velocity) P 1 +½ v gy 1 = P o P1P1 When air is blown in between the cans, the velocity is not equal to 0. P 2 +½ v 2 2 (ignore y) case: 1: no blowing 2: blowing
PHY Applications of Bernoulli’s law: moving a cart No spin, no movement V air