Physics 207: Lecture 2 Notes
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Transcript Physics 207: Lecture 2 Notes
Chapter 15, Fluids & Elasticity
This is an actual photo of an iceberg, taken by a rig manager for
Global Marine Drilling in St. Johns, Newfoundland. The water was
calm and the sun was almost directly overhead so that the diver
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 1
Goals:
Lecture 21
• Chapter 15
Understand pressure in liquids
and gases
Use Archimedes’ principle to
understand buoyancy
Understand the equation of
continuity
Use an ideal-fluid model to study
fluid flow.
Investigate the elastic
deformation of solids and
liquids
• Assignment
HW10, Due Wednesday, Apr. 14th
Thursday: Read all of Chapter 16
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 2
Fluids
At ordinary temperature, matter exists
in one of three states
Solid - has a shape and forms a
surface
Liquid - has no shape but forms a
surface
Gas - has no shape and forms no
surface
What do we mean by “fluids”?
Fluids are “substances that
flow”…. “substances that take the
shape of the container”
Atoms and molecules are free to
move.
No long range correlation between
positions.
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 3
Fluids
An intrinsic parameter of a fluid
Density
m
V
units :
kg/m3 = 10-3 g/cm3
(water) = 1.000 x 103 kg/m3
= 1.000 g/cm3
(ice)
= 0.917 x 103 kg/m3
= 0.917 g/cm3
(air)
= 1.29 kg/m3
= 1.29 x 10-3 g/cm3
(Hg)
= 13.6 x103 kg/m3
(W or Au) = 19.3 x103 kg/m3
= 13.6 g/cm3
= 19.3 g/cm3
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 4
Fluids
F
p
A
Another parameter: Pressure
Any force exerted by a fluid is perpendicular to a surface
of contact, and is proportional to the area of that surface.
Force (a vector) in a fluid can be expressed in terms
of pressure (a scalar) as:
F pAnˆ
ˆ
n
A
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 5
What is the SI unit of pressure?
A. Pascal
B. Atmosphere
C. Bernoulli
D. Young
E. p.s.i.
Units :
1 N/m2
1 bar
1 mbar
1 torr
= 1 Pa (Pascal)
= 105 Pa
= 102 Pa
= 133.3 Pa
1 atm = 1.013 x105 Pa
= 1013 mbar
= 760 Torr
= 14.7 lb/ in2 (=PSI)
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 6
Pressure vs. Depth
Incompressible Fluids (liquids)
p
When the pressure is small,
relative to the bulk modulus of
the fluid, we can treat the
density as constant independent
of pressure:
incompressible fluid
0
y1
F1
y2
p
1
A
p
2
mg F
2
For an incompressible fluid, the
density is the same everywhere,
but the pressure is NOT!
p(y) = p0 - y g
Gauge pressure (subtract p0)
pGauge = p(y) - p0
F2 = F1+ m g
= F1+ Vg
F2 /A = F1/A + Vg/A
p2 = p1 - g y
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 7
Pressure vs. Depth
For a uniform fluid in an open container pressure
same at a given depth independent of the container
y
p(y)
Fluid level is the same everywhere in a connected
container, assuming no surface forces
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 8
Pressure Measurements: Barometer
Invented by Torricelli
A long closed tube is filled with mercury
and inverted in a dish of mercury
The closed end is nearly a vacuum
Measures atmospheric pressure as
1 atm = 0.760 m (of Hg)
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 9
Exercise
Pressure
What happens with two fluids??
dI
Consider a U tube containing liquids of
density 1 and 2 as shown:
2
1
Compare the densities of the liquids:
(A) 1 < 2
(B) 1 = 2
(C) 1 > 2
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 10
Exercise
Pressure
What happens with two fluids??
Consider a U tube containing liquids of
density 1 and 2 as shown:
2
At the red arrow the pressure must be the
dI
1 y
same on either side. 1 x = 2 (d1+ y)
Compare the densities of the liquids:
(A) 1 < 2
(B) 1 = 2
(C) 1 > 2
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 11
Archimedes’ Principle: A Eureka Moment
Suppose we weigh an object in air (1) and
in water (2).
W1
W2?
How do these weights compare?
W1 < W2
W1 = W 2
W1 > W2
Buoyant
force is equal to the
weight of the fluid displaced
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 12
Archimedes’ Principle
Suppose we weigh an object in air (1) and in water (2).
How do these weights compare?
W1 < W2
W 1 = W2
Why?
Since the pressure at the bottom
of the object is greater than that
at the top of the object, the water
exerts a net upward force, the
buoyant force, on the object.
W1 > W 2
W1
W2?
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 14
Sink or Float?
The buoyant force is equal to the weight of
the liquid that is displaced.
If the buoyant force is larger than the
weight of the object, it will float; otherwise
it will sink.
y
FB mg
We can calculate how much of a floating object will be
submerged in the liquid:
Object is in equilibrium
FB mg
liquid g Vliquid object g Vobject
Vliquid
Vobject
object
liquid
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 15
Bar Trick
What happens to the water level when the ice melts?
Expt. 1
A. It rises
Expt. 2
B. It stays the same
piece of rock
on top of ice
C. It drops
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 16
Exercise
V1 = V2 = V3 = V4 = V5
m1 < m2 < m3 < m4 < m5
What is the final position of each block?
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 17
Exercise
V1 = V2 = V3 = V4 = V5
m1 < m2 < m3 < m4 < m5
What is the final position of each block?
Not this
But this
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 18
Pascal’s Principle
So far we have discovered (using Newton’s Laws):
Pressure depends on depth: Dp = - g Dy
Pascal’s Principle addresses how a change in pressure is
transmitted through a fluid.
Any change in the pressure applied to an enclosed
fluid is transmitted to every portion of the fluid and to
the walls of the containing vessel.
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 24
Pascal’s Principle in action:
Hydraulics, a force amplifier
F1
Consider the system shown:
F2
A downward force F1 is applied
to the piston of area A1.
This force is transmitted through
the liquid to create an upward
force F2.
d2
d1
Pascal’s Principle says that
increased pressure from F1
(F1/A1) is transmitted
throughout the liquid.
A1
A2
P1 = P2
F1 / A1 = F2 / A2
A2 / A1 = F2 / F1
F2 > F1 with conservation of energy
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 25
Fluids in Motion
To describe fluid motion, we need
something that describes flow:
Velocity v
There are different kinds of fluid flow of varying complexity
non-steady
/ steady
compressible / incompressible
rotational
/ irrotational
viscous
/ ideal
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 27
Types of Fluid Flow
Laminar flow
Each particle of the fluid
follows a smooth path
The paths of the different
particles never cross each
other
The path taken by the
particles is called a
streamline
Turbulent flow
An irregular flow
characterized by small
whirlpool like regions
Turbulent flow occurs when
the particles go above some
critical speed
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 28
Types of Fluid Flow
Laminar flow
Each particle of the fluid
follows a smooth path
The paths of the different
particles never cross each
other
The path taken by the
particles is called a
streamline
Turbulent flow
An irregular flow
characterized by small
whirlpool like regions
Turbulent flow occurs when
the particles go above some
critical speed
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 29
Lecture 21
• Question to ponder:
or float?
Does heavy water (D2O) ice sink
• Assignment
HW10, due Wednesday, Apr. 14th
Thursday: Read all of Chapter 16
Physics 207: Lecture 21, Pg 30