Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its...

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Forces and Fluids

Transcript of Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its...

Page 1: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Forces and Fluids

Page 2: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

What is a fluid?

A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container.

Liquids - like water and blood,

AND

gases - like oxygen - are fluids!

Page 3: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Under Pressure

Pressure is the amount of force pushing against an amount of area

Increasing the pressure means more force is pushing in

the same area Same force on smaller area.

Decreasing the pressure means less force on same area. Same force on larger area.

fall through ice

Page 4: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Why are bubbles round?

Fluid exerts pressure evenly in all directions. This also explains why tires inflate evenly,

not just in the spot where the air is going in!.

Page 5: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Pressure and Area Any object with weight exerts pressure

We exert (or give) pressure against the ground below our feet (and there’s an equal force pushing back up!)

If we carry extra weight, we increase the pressure under our feet because we are pushing harder against the same area

BUT, if we increase the size of our shoes and spread the same force over a larger areas, the pressure decreases.

That’s why we can step across deep snow in wide snowshoes!

Page 6: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

A woman’s high heels sink into the soft ground, because her force is exerted over a smaller area (her heel). Force

over a smaller area increases the pressure.

Pressure = force/area

Why did the woman sink, but not the man?

Page 7: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

More Math We can calculate the amount of pressure, force

or area using the formulaForce = Pressure x Area

Area = Force Pressure

Pressure = Force Area

The unit we use to measure pressure is the pascal (say pass-kal) or Pa

Page 8: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Pressure in the Atmosphere The layer of nitrogen, oxygen and other gases that surround the

Earth. 80% of gases are found within 10km of Earth’s surface.

The atmosphere is the air that stretches 150 Km above you

The atmosphere is held in place by gravity.

Atmospheric pressure = pressure cased by the weight of the atmosphere

The force or pressure of this air is equal to about 10N on every square cm of your body!

Page 9: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

What’s pushing on you?

At sea level (like Sandy Hook) , the pressure from the atmosphere is about 101,000 Pa

At Mount Everest, it is about 33,000 Pa

As you go higher, air pressure decreases because there’s less air above you!

Page 10: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

A Sea of Air? In any fluid (liquid or gas), there is more

pressure the deeper you go.

On Earth, a beach at sea level is “deeper” is the atmosphere than a mountain top.

In the ocean, you have the pressure of the water PLUS the pressure of the air on top of that!

Page 11: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Pressure ONLY depends on DEPTH…

not how much water there is.

Where would you experience more water pressure……..

9 feet underwater in a pool

or

2 feet underwater in the ocean?

Page 12: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.
Page 13: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

•Water pressure increases with depth.

Explain the difference in the water pressure from the

different spouts.

Page 14: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Working with Pressure

Divers use regulators with their tanks to increase the pressure of the air coming from the tank to their lungs. This makes it easier to breathe under water (where there is a lot of pressure!)

Page 15: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Differences in Pressure(Go with the Flow) Fluids flow from high

pressure (where there is a lot of force pushing on them) to low pressure.

This is how a straw works!

It is also how you breathe!

Fluids flow from HIGH to LOW!

Page 16: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

•Air Pressure decreases as elevation increases.

Page 17: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

•When a force is applied to a confined (enclosed) fluid, the increase in pressure is transmitted equally to all parts of the fluid.

Page 18: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Transmitting Pressure in a Fluid When force is applied to a confined

fluid, the change in pressure is transmitted equally to all parts of the fluid.

Page 19: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Hydraulic Devices In a hydraulic device, a

force applied to one piston increases the fluid pressure equally throughout the fluid.

Page 20: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Hydraulic Devices

By changing the size of the pistons, the force can be multiplied.

Page 21: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Hydraulic Brakes

The hydraulic brake system of a car multiplies the force exerted on the brake pedal.

Page 22: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Buoyancy

Net upward force is called the buoyant force!!!

It is easier to lift a rock in water (your force PLUS the buoyant force)!!

Page 23: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Displacement of Water

The amount of water displaced is equal to the volume of the rock.

Page 24: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Archimedes’ Principle

An immersed body is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces.

If the buoyant force on an object is greater than the force of gravity acting on the object, the object will float

The apparent weight of an object in a liquid is gravitational force (weight) minus the buoyant force

Page 25: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

FloatationA floating object displaces a weight of fluid equal to its own weight.

Page 26: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

What’s the Difference?

Page 27: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

What is Density?

Density is the amount of matter in a specific volume

If two objects have the same volume (take up the same amount of space), then the object with the greater density will weigh more.

Page 28: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Why Does Density Matter?

Water is more dense and weighs more than the same volume of air. So air is “floating” on water.

The difference in density between water and ice explains why ice floats in water. (Ice is LESS dense than water)

BUT, ice is heavier than gasoline and will sink in a puddle of gasoline.

Page 29: Forces and Fluids. What is a fluid? A fluid is any material that can flow and take the shape of its container. Liquids - like water and blood, AND gases.

Balloons and Density

Helium (used in balloons) is 8 times lighter than oxygen and will float in air.

But helium is 2 times heavier than hydrogen (so it would sink in hydrogen).

Hydrogen floats better in air (because it is less dense), but it’s not as safe!