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Fluids and Pressure PHYS 1090 Unit 5

Fluids and Pressure

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Fluids and Pressure. PHYS 1090 Unit 5. Balloon Mash. Greater force makes larger contact area. Pressure. Force applied per unit area p = F / A If pressure is constant, force and area change together. Pressure within Fluids. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Fluids and Pressure

Fluids and Pressure

PHYS 1090 Unit 5

Page 2: Fluids and Pressure

Balloon Mash

• Greater force makes larger contact area

Page 3: Fluids and Pressure

Pressure

• Force applied per unit area

p = F/A

• If pressure is constant, force and area change together

Page 4: Fluids and Pressure

Pressure within Fluids

• Pascal’s Principle: fluids exert pressure evenly in all directions

Page 5: Fluids and Pressure

Balloon Mash

• Upward force (pressure area) on plate exactly cancelled plate’s weight

• As weight increased, contact area did too

• (pressure may have increased as well)

Page 6: Fluids and Pressure

Fountain

• Water shoots farther from lower holes

• Streams weaken as water drains

Page 7: Fluids and Pressure

Static Fluids

• Pressure counteracts weight of fluid above (Pascal’s principle)

Supports weight above

• Pressure increases with depth

Page 8: Fluids and Pressure

Liquid Pressure Formula

p = hg

• p = pressure

• = density of liquid

• h = depth under top of liquid

h

p = pressure here

Page 9: Fluids and Pressure

Pressure within a Liquid

• Shape of the container does not matter!

• All that matters are depth h, fluid density , and gravitational field g.

p = hg

Page 10: Fluids and Pressure

Fountain

• Stream velocity depends on pressure

• Pressure depends on depth

• Rocks in the can have no effect

Page 11: Fluids and Pressure

Sinking and Floating

• Objects displace a volume of water equal to their submerged volume

• A floating boat displaces an additional volume of air

Page 12: Fluids and Pressure

What forces are present?

Page 13: Fluids and Pressure

What forces are present?

Page 14: Fluids and Pressure

What forces are present?

Page 15: Fluids and Pressure

What forces are present?

Page 16: Fluids and Pressure

Pressure in a fluid

• Pressure increases with depth

• Greater pressure at bottom than top of an immersed object

• Results in upward buoyancy force that is the (vector) sum of all pA forces

Page 17: Fluids and Pressure

Buoyancy Force

• Buoyancy force = weight of fluid displaced(Principle of Archimedes)

F = Vg

= density of fluid V = volume of fluid displaced = volume of

object submerged g = 9.8 N/kg

Page 18: Fluids and Pressure

Sinking and Floating

• All objects are lighter under water

• Difference is buoyancy force• If buoyancy > weight, object rises to

surface and floats (so buoyancy = weight)

• if buoyancy < weight, object sinks

Page 19: Fluids and Pressure

Clay Lump

• Weight of the lump was constant

• Making a boat increased the volume of water displaced

• That increased the buoyancy force

• A great enough buoyancy floated the boat

Page 20: Fluids and Pressure

Expanding and Contracting

• The same amount of gas occupies more volume at a higher temperature.

Page 21: Fluids and Pressure

Convection

• Warm fluids expand, becoming less dense

• Circulation is driven by buoyancy forces

• Much faster than conduction

Page 22: Fluids and Pressure

“Ideal Gas” Law

• p = pressure

• V = volume

• N = number of gas molecules

• kB = 1.3806610–23 J/K

• T = absolute (Kelvin) temperature

pV = NkBT

Page 23: Fluids and Pressure

Gas Pressure and Volume

• At a constant temperature, pV is constant• Increasing p decreases V and vice versa

p

V

pV = NkBT

Page 24: Fluids and Pressure

Balloon Mash

• Pressure may have increased with greater force because air was compressed (volume became less)

Page 25: Fluids and Pressure

Diver

• Diver’s weight = weight of (glass + air)

• Buoyancy = weight of excluded water

• Increasing pressure decreases air volume

• Buoyancy decreases

• Weight is unchanged

Page 26: Fluids and Pressure

Neutral Buoyancy

• Air doesn’t weigh much

• Glass weight doesn’t change

• At neutral buoyancy F = 0, buoyancy↑ = glass weight↓

• Neutral buoyancy air volume is the same for all initial bubble sizes