* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Physics 1010: The Physics of Everyday Life
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Physics 1010: The Physics of Everyday Life TODAY • Pressure, Boyancy 1 Administrative Mattters • Mark is e-mailing grades to students not on the clicker list; if you have not received your grade e-mail Mark ([email protected]) • Clickers 137097, 275456, 169571, 222227, 275422 still unclaimed. If you own one of these clickers please e-mail Yu ([email protected]) 2 Today’s topics • • • • Pressure, density, and temperature Ideal gas law Archimedes’ principle & buoyancy force Water pressure 3 Gases • Consist of molecules (about 10-9 m across) that bounce around • They do not fall to ground because they have kinetic energy [(1/2)mv2 ] • More kinetic energy means more temperature • Bouncing off the wall causes it to exert a force (concervation of momentum; Newton’s III) 4 Pressure: bouncing off the walls The piston is free to move. After the tiny molecule hits it, the piston a) shakes b) moves to the left at constant velocity c) accelerates to the left d) remains stationary The piston moves to the left at constant velocity, as it acquired momentum from the molecule (concervation of momentum). 5 Pressure: bouncing off the walls The piston is free to move. Molecule after molecule hits it, the piston a) shakes b) moves to the left at constant velocity c) accelerates to the left d) remains stationary The piston accelerates to the left as each molecule gives it more momentum, meaning….. THERE IS A NET FORCE ON THE PISTON 6 Pressure: the force per unit area • • • • • • • More area exposed to gas implies more collisions More collisions implies more momentum transfer More momentum transfer implies more force Force = Pressure x Area Pressure = Force/Area Unit: 1 Pascal (Pa) = 1 N/m2 Atmospheric pressure = 100,000 Pa = 105 Pa = 14.7 lbs/sq. inch 7 Pressure is in all directions • Water comes out whether cork is on top, side, or bottom 8 Mass density: mass per unit volume • Allows calculation of mass from volume • Mass = Density x Volume • Some common densities: Water (humans and animals): 1000 kg/m3 (64 lbs/cubic foot) Lead: 11,400 kg/m3 Uranium: 19,000 kg/m3 Air: 1.239 kg/m3 • Squeezing air: more air in smaller volume, so denser, more density Mass density is denoted by ρ 9 Anything can form a density • Particle density: # of particles / unit volume • People density: # of people /unit volume • What is the people density in this room? (room is ~20mx15mx6m, class is ~200 students) a) 0.05 people/m3 b) 0.1 people/m3 c) 0.5 people/m3 d) 1 people/m3 People density = number of people/volume of room 200 people/1,800 m3 = 0.11 people/ m3 Mass density is denoted by ρ, number density by n 10 Pressure increases with density • Twice the molecules means twice the collisions • Twice the collisions means twice the momentum transfer • Twice the momentum transfer means twice the pressure 11 Pressure increases with average kinetic energy [(1/2)mv2] • More speed means more collisions with the wall • More speed and mass, more momentum that each collision transfers to wall • Pressure proportional to v x mv ~ mv2 • Pressure proportional to temperature 12 Ideal gas law • Pressure proportional to density x temperature (relative to absolute zero) Density: more dense means more molecules hitting sides of wall Temperature: more temperature means molecules hitting more rapidly, with more momentum transfer 13 Ideal gas law “is proportional to” p∝nT absolute pressure (not pressure relative to atmosphere) absolute temperature (use Kelvin, not F or C!) molecule density (number of molecules per unit volume) Constant of proportionality: “Boltzmann’s constant” k = 1.38 x 10-23 J/K = 1.38 x 10-23 N m/K = 1.38 x 10-23 Pa m3/ K p=nkT Amazingly, k is a “universal” constant: it is the same for any species of gas. 14 Can you answer? • • • • • • • • • In higher temperature gases, the molecules move A) faster or B) slower? Does pressure push down as well as up? A)True B) False How does pressure relate to force? A) F=mass x acceleration B) F=Pressure x Area What is a Pascal? What does mass density mean? Or any kind of density? How does pressure change with mass density and temperature? 15 Properties of the earth’s atmosphere • Earth radius = 4,000 mi • Atmospheric thickness = 4 mi • Less than one pixel on screen 16 Atmospheric pressure is due to weight of air • Force down on separating membrane is weight of air above • Manifestation is pressure • Force up from air below is pressure to balance • Pressure is weight of column of air divided by area 17 Pressure under water increases more rapidly as you go down • Pressure is the weight of water above one square meter • Weight increases as you go down • For each meter down, adding 1 cubic meter, or 1000 kg = 10,000 N • Each 10 m then add 100,000 N or one atmosphere! 18 Buoyancy: how ballons lift and ships float • Archimedes principle: an object in a fluid feels an upward force equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces • Fluid falls down where object was • Net weight = weight of object in vacuum minus weight of fluid having volume equal to that of object 19 100,000 Pa = Empty Cube (with side 1 meter) Not even air inside m 1m 1m 1m At sea level, atmospheric pressure is about 100,000 Pa. How much force does the atmosphere exert on the top side of an empty cube with side 1 meter? What mass, set on top of the cube, would exert approximately the same force? Hint: 100,000 Pa = 100,000 N/m2 A. B. C. D. E. atmospheric force on one side 1,000 N 10,000 N 10,000 N 100,000 N 100,000 N mass exerting equivalent force 102 kg 102 kg 1020 kg 1020 kg 10200 kg Answer: E. Force is pressure times area: 100,000 Pa x 1 m2 = 100,000 N/m2 x 1 m2 = 100,000 N A mass of 10,200 kg (10 tons!) exerts mg = 100,000 N 20 The area of your palm is 50 cm2 = 0.005 m2. If you hold out your hand, palm up, what downward force does the atmosphere (at about 100,000 Pa) exert on the palm of your hand? A. B. C. D. E. 50 N 500 N 5,000 N 50,000 N 500,000 N Answer: B. 100,000 Pa x 0.005 m2 = 100,000 N/m2 x 0.005 m2 = 500 N Note: a mass of 51 kg exerts about mg = 500 N = 110 pounds. 21 About 10,000 kg of air is in a 1 m2 column above the earth’s surface The weight of air: ~10,000 kg 100,000 Pa = = Several miles of air = ~10,000 kg The atmosphere exerts a force around 500 N on the palm of your hand. Where does this force come from? About 50 kg of air is in a 50 cm2 column above the earth’s surface 1m 1m 22 Why don’t you feel 100 lbs of force on your palm? A because you’re pushing back with 100 lbs B because it’s pushing on all sides C because you’re used to it D because we’re strong 23 Why don’t you feel 100 lbs of force on your palm? Air pressure is the same all around your hand ⇒ no net force* 100 lbs downward your hand 100 lbs upward *Actually, there is a net force on your hand--buoyancy (the pressure below your hand is slightly greater than the pressure above); however, the buoyant force (in air) is negligible for objects much denser than air. Keep watching for more on buoyancy. 24 The atmosphere exerts a force around 500 N on the palm of your hand, regardless of whether your palm is turned upwards or downwards (or sideways). Fluids exert the same pressure in every direction, because fluids flow when the pressure is different in different directions. Cube of Solid with downward pressure: maintains shape without pressure on sides. Cube of Fluid with downward pressure: flows out of shape unless an equal pressure is applied to other sides 25 Water Pressure and Gravity Water, unlike air, maintains nearly the same density regardless of pressure (in-compressible): 1 g/cm3, or 1000 kg/m3 Clicker Question: A tall water trough on the surface of the Earth, 1 m x 1m x 4m. Each cubic meter of water weighs 10,000 N. What is the pressure at the bottom of the trough, 4 meters below the surface of the water (which is at atmospheric pressure)? A. 0 B. 40,000 Pa C. 100,000 Pa D. 140,000 Pa E. 400,000 Pa Atmospheric exerts 100,000N pressure: on 1 m2 100,000 Pa 10,000 N 1m 10,000 N 1m 10,000 N 1m Answer: D. The force on the bottom square 1m meter is 100,000 N + (4 x 10,000 N) = 140,000 N. The pressure is 140,000 N / 1 m2 = 140,000 Pa. 10,000 N 1m 1m 26 Why doesn’t water sink? Atmospheric exerts 100,000N pressure: on 1 m2 100,000 Pa 110,000 N pressure 100,000 Pa 10,000 N 1m No net force! Pressure difference exactly balances weight! 110,000 Pa 10,000 N 1m 120,000 Pa 10,000 N 1m 130,000 Pa 10,000 N 1m 1m 140,000 Pa 1m mg=10,000 N 120,000 N Note: pressures from sides are left out of drawing 27 Force of water on other stuff: buoyancy Atmospheric pressure: 100,000 Pa displaced water Remove one cubic meter of water; replace with one cubic meter of steel. Steel density: 8 g/cc = 8000 kg/m3 pressure 110,000 N 100,000 Pa 1m 110,000 Pa 1m 120,000 Pa mg=80,000 N 1m 130,000 Pa 120,000 N 1m 140,000 Pa 1m 1m 1m 1m Fnet = 70,000 N downward --steel sinks in water 28 Force of water on other stuff: buoyancy Atmospheric pressure: 100,000 Pa displaced water Remove one cubic meter of water; replace with one cubic meter of pine wood Pine density: 0.5 g/cc = 500 kg/m3 pressure What is the net force on the cube of wood? 100,000 Pa 120,000 N 1m 110,000 Pa 1m 120,000 Pa 1m 130,000 Pa mg= 5,000 N 1m 140,000 Pa 1m 1m 1m 1m 130,000 N Fnet = 5,000 N upwards --the wood floats 29 Calculating buoyancy forces • • To calculate force of a fluid on an immersed object: 1. Find volume V of object (or of the part of the object below the surface of the fluid). 2. Find the weight of a volume V of the fluid ( mg = ρVg, where ρ is the mass density of the fluid). 3. The buoyant force of the fluid on the immersed object is equal and opposite to the weight of the displaced fluid. Why? The force of the fluid on the immersed object will be the same as the force of the fluid on the fluid displaced by the object; that force is exactly equal to the weight of the displaced fluid (because when the fluid was where the object is, it was not accelerating). 30 V is the volume of what? • A the object • B the fluid desplaced by the object • C A and B 31 Calculating buoyancy forces • To calculate force of a fluid on an immersed object: 1. Find volume V of object. 2. Find the weight of the same volume V of the fluid ( mg = ρVg, where ρ is the mass density of the fluid). 3. The buoyant force of the fluid on the immersed object is equal and opposite to the weight of the displaced fluid. Clicker Question : A brick has a density of about 2000 kg/m3. What is the net force on a brick of volume 0.001 m3 immersed in water? (for convenience, use g~10m/s2) A. B. C. D. E. 20 N upward 10 N upward 0 10 N downward 20 N downward Answer: D. The weight of the brick is 20 N (downward); the weight of 0.001 m3 displaced water is 10 N. The buoyant force on the brick is therefore 10 N upward. The net force on the brick is 10 N downward. The brick sinks. 32 Calculating buoyancy forces in air • To calculate force of a fluid on an immersed object: 1. Find volume V of object. 2. Find the weight of the same volume V of the fluid ( mg = ρVg, where ρ is the mass density of the fluid). 3. The buoyant force of the fluid on the immersed object is equal and opposite to the weight of the displaced fluid. Clicker Question : A brick has a density of about 2000 kg/m3. Air (at room temp/sea-level pressure) has a density around 1 kg/m3. What is the buoyant force on a brick of volume 0.001 m3 immersed in air? (for convenience, use g~10m/s2) A. B. C. D. E. 0 0.0001 N upward 0.001 N upward 0.01 N upward 0.1 N upward Answer: D. The mass of 0.001 m3 of displaced air is 0.001 kg; its weight is 0.01 N. The buoyant force on the brick is therefore 0.01 N upward. The brick, which would weigh 20 N in vacuum, appears to weigh only 19.99 N in air. 33 Buoyancy depends on mass density of object relative to mass density of fluid • If object is less dense than fluid it floats because the buoyancy is greater than the gravitational force • Examples: Wood in water: floats Oil in water: floats Lead in water: sinks 34 Swimmers: you can float or sink depending on the air in your lungs • Humans are approximately neutrally buoyant because they are made of water • Jump in, at surface take in as much air as possible - float • Now empty your lungs all the way - sink • Caveat: must not have clothing that traps air bubbles 35 For Stationary Water, Pressure Changes with Height To support the weight of the above water, the water pressure must increase by 10,000 Pa per meter depth (about 1/10 of an atmosphere per meter). Water density: ρ = 1000 kg/m3 p1 Gravity Δh p2 1m 1m weight = mg = ρV g = ρ (1 m2) Δh g The pressure increase is the increased weight divided by the area: p2 = p1 + mg = p1 + ρg Δh p2 = p1 + ρg Δh or p2 + ρgh2 = p1 + ρgh1 or p + ρgh = constant (increasing h means lowering p) 36 For Stationary Water, Pressure Changes with Height p + ρgh = constant Kind of like “conservation of energy” for non-moving water: Pressure + gravitational potential energy = constant Pressure is energy density (energy per unit volume) Important: the difference in pressures at two points within a static water column depends only on the differences in height of the two points. For example, water pressure increases by about 10,000 Pa (actually 9800 Pa) for every meter increase in depth (on the surface of the Earth), regardless of its container. Remember work done on body to move up a hight h. Also important: this is true for water and most liquids; it is not true for air and other gases. Why? The density ρ is not constant for gases. 37 For Moving Water, Bernoulli’s Principle p + ρgh + (1/2)ρv2 = constant Kind of like “conservation of energy” for moving water: Pressure + gravitational potential energy + kinetic energy = constant Pressure is energy density (energy per unit volume) 38 1 2 P? P? Clicker question : a. Pressure in case 1 is larger than in case 2. b. Pressure in case 2 is larger than in case 1. c. Pressure in case 1 is same as in case 2. d. Pressures can’t be determined because the hoses are contorted into complicated shapes. Answer: c. In both cases, the end of the hose is the same distance below the water level. The path and shape of the hose make no difference (in the absence of viscosity, or fluid friction). GRAVITY IS A CONSERVATIVE FIELD; REMEMBER THE RAMP PROBLEMS 39 Clicker Question Water streams out from three spigots in an open bucket. From which hole will the water emerge traveling fastest? A B Answer: C The water pressure increases with depth; a greater water pressure exerts a greater force on the water emerging from the spigot, causing greater acceleration, giving the water a greater exit velocity. C D. A, B, and C will spout water at the same speed 40 Note to Last Clicker Question 100,000 Pa The acceleration of water as it emerges from a spigot is governed not merely by the pressure inside the bucket, but by the pressure difference across the spigot. h 100,000 Pa + ρgh 100,000 Pa p1=100,000 Pa + ρgh p2 = 100,000 Pa atmospheric pressure plus water pressure atmospheric pressure Δp = ρgh resulting flow 41 Speed of Water Emerging Under Pressure Water leaves spout with kinetic energy; where does the energy come from? A B C D 42 Speed of Water Emerging Under Pressure Water leaves spout with kinetic energy; where does the energy come from? Area A Δh m Grav. Potential Energy lost: mgh Kinetic Energy Gained: (1/2)mv2 Energy Conservation: mgh = (1/2)mv2 h v = 2gh Note: v Volume of water leaving tank: A Δh Mass of water leaving tank: m = ρA Δh Δp = ρgh Does this look familiar? ! v Because of Δp, water exits with speed Water exits with same same velocity that an object would v gain falling (from rest) a distance equal to the height of the water column. 100,000 Pa 43 Review • Pressure = Force / Area • Pressure of gases increases with density, temperature (average kinetic energy) • Pressure increases with depth (both for water and for air) • Boyancy force = weight of displaced fluid 44