
lecture 9 - Openstorage Gunadarma
... It is not taking account the variations of circuit voltage ...
... It is not taking account the variations of circuit voltage ...
Chapter 3 Basic of Fluid Flow
... velocity, pressure, depth etc.) at a given instant in time only vary in the direction of flow and not across the cross-section. The flow may be unsteady, in this case the parameter vary in time but still not across the cross-section. An example of one-dimensional flow is the flow in a pipe. Note t ...
... velocity, pressure, depth etc.) at a given instant in time only vary in the direction of flow and not across the cross-section. The flow may be unsteady, in this case the parameter vary in time but still not across the cross-section. An example of one-dimensional flow is the flow in a pipe. Note t ...
Basics
... • Vectors can be broken down into components • For example in two dimensions, we can define two mutually perpendicular axes in convenient directions, and then calculate the magnitude in each direction • Vectors can be added • The brown vector plus the blue vector equals the green vector ...
... • Vectors can be broken down into components • For example in two dimensions, we can define two mutually perpendicular axes in convenient directions, and then calculate the magnitude in each direction • Vectors can be added • The brown vector plus the blue vector equals the green vector ...
Flow conditioning
Flow conditioning ensures that the “real world” environment closely resembles the “laboratory” environment for proper performance of inferential flowmeters like orifice, turbine, coriolis, ultrasonic etc.