When you studied rotational motion
you learned that in many cases the effect of a force was not determined solely
by the magnitude of the force. The rotational effect produced by a force depends
not only upon the magnitude of the force, but also upon the lever arm of the
force. Similarly there are many situations in which the area to which the
force is applied is important in determining the effect of a force. This is
the case for fluids. The investigation of the behavior of fluids is made easier
by the introduction of the concept of pressure. We define pressure as the
force divided by the area over which the force is applied, P = F / A. We give
the name Pascal to the pressure unit equal to one Newton per square meter
or 1 Pa = 1 N / m2. Pressure can be increased by increasing the
force or by reducing the area to which a given force is applied. The physical
variable pressure is very useful in considering the behavior of fluids, whether
those fluids are liquids or gases. Pascal's principle explains why
the concept of pressure is so useful in investigating the behavior of fluids.
It states that any change in pressure of a fluid is transmitted uniformly,
in all directions, throughout a fluid. As a result of Pascal's principle we
do not have to engage in detailed analysis to determine the direction of each
force at each point in a fluid, because Pascal's principle tells us that the
change in pressure is transmitted uniformly in all directions within the fluid.
Atmospheric pressure represents
the effect of the air above the surface of the Earth. Expressed in terms of
standard pressure, measured at sea level, atmospheric pressure is 1.01 x 105
N / m2 or 101 kPa. You may be more familiar with atmospheric pressure
expressed in the British System of Units as 14.7 lb / in2 or as
approximately 30 inches of mercury. The latter unit refers to the column of
mercury that can be supported by a pressure of one standard atmosphere. The
effect of the air in the atmosphere on us is the same as carrying 1.01 x 105
Newtons on every square meter or of having a weight of 14.7 pounds upon every
square inch of our bodies. Ordinarily we do not notice this "load" because
we also have air permeating our bodies pushing back out against this pressure.
Perhaps you have ridden in a very fast elevator, or you may have flown in
a commercial airliner that was climbing or descending at a rapid rate. If
so, you may noticed the difference in pressure on your eardrums as your body
was not able to react quickly enough to adjust the inside pressure to be equal
to the pressure outside the body. Gases are compressible, so a column
of a gas, such as air, has a greater density near the bottom of the column
than it does near the top of the column. In a sense the weight of the column
of air causes the portion at the bottom to be squeezed closer together, i.e.
to be compressed. Liquids are much less compressible than gases. In most cases
we consider a column of a liquid to have the same density throughout its entire
height. Boyle's law states that the product
of the pressure times the volume for a gas is equal to a constant. In equation
form this is expressed as P1 V1 = P2 V2
. Boyle's law is really a special case of having the temperature held constant
in the more general expression known as the ideal gas law. A column of liquid will produce a
pressure that depends upon the density of the liquid, d, the height of the
liquid, h, and the acceleration of gravity, g, according to the equation D
P = d h g. Archimedes' principle states that the buoyant force acting on an
object that is fully or partially submerged in a fluid is equal to the weight
of the fluid that is displaced by the object. Bernoulli's principle is an expression
of the conservation of energy in terms of variables that are more conveniently
measured for fluids. It is useful for calculating the pressure or velocity
of a fluid in such cases as a fluid moving in a pipe, and it can be used to
explain such phenomena as the lift on airplane wings and the deflection of
a curve ball. Bernoulli's principle is derived using the principle of conservation of
energy. According to Bernoulli's principle for a level pipe, the sum of the
pressure plus the kinetic energy per unit volume of a flowing fluid must remain
constant. In equation form this is expressed as P + (1 / 2) d v2
= constant, where d is the fluid density. Thus, if the velocity of a fluid increases,
as, for example, through a constriction in a horizontal pipe where the equation
of continuity requires faster velocity, the pressure must decrease to maintain
the equality in Bernoulli's equation. The lift on airplane wings provides
a practical illustration of Bernoulli's principle. The wings are designed
so that the airflow is faster past the top of the wings. Bernoulli's principle
requires the pressure to be lower where the velocity is higher with the consequence
that the pressure is greater on the undersurface of the wing than on the upper
surface resulting in the lift that makes flying possible. |