Phys2N Module 5 Hand-Outs
Phys2N Module 5 Hand-Outs
Phys2N Module 5 Hand-Outs
DEFINITION OF PRESSURE
Fluids
- either a gas or a liquid
- a substance that continually deforms (flows) under an applied shear stress, no matter how
small.
Another unit for pressure is atmosphere (atm) where 1 atm is the atmospheric pressure or the
average pressure due to the weight of the atmosphere at sea level.
- Note that 1 atm = 1.013 x 105 N/m2.
QUESTION: What might be the reason why it seems so hard to get out of bed after a good night rest?
QUESTION: Why is it that when a nurse pokes you in the arm with a hypodermic needle, the needle
breaks your skin not like when a nurse pokes you in the arm with her finger?
Consider a force applied at a given area which creates a certain amount of pressure. When the same
force applied to a smaller area, it creates a larger pressure and has a much different effect.
Stationary fluids always exert forces perpendicular to surfaces regardless of the direction.
EXAMPLE: Calculate the force exerted by the atmosphere in one side of the wall of area 10 m 2. Why is it
that despite the large amount of force exerted by the atmosphere on the wall, the house doesn’t fall
apart?!
The reason the force is always perpendicular to the surface is that fluids cannot withstand shearing
or sideways forces and therefore cannot exert sideways forces.
The effect of atmospheric pressure often cancels or negligible and it is tiresome to always add
atmospheric pressure to other pressures involved in a phenomena to get the total pressure.
Gauge pressure
- the pressure above or below atmospheric pressure
Total pressure (absolute pressure)
- gauge pressure plus atmospheric pressure
- Pgauge + Patm
ACHTUNG! It is the applied pressure, not the force that is transmitted undiminished to all parts of a
fluid.
Forces are transmitted in fluids but they may be made larger or smaller by the fluid depending on
circumstances.
In most hydraulic systems, a small force is put into the system and causes a large force to emerge
from the other end of the system. Since the pressure will remain undiminished until it reaches the
other end,
F1 F 2
= .
A1 A2
EXAMPLE: The large piston supports a dentist’s chair, and the dentist wants to lift the patient by
stepping on a pedal directly on top of the small piston. Calculate the force the dentist must exert if the
patient plus chair have a mass of 120 kg and the small piston has a diameter of 1.0 cm, while the large
piston has a diameter of 5.0 cm.
EXAMPLE: Calculate the pressure in Newtons per square meter at a depth of 2.5 m due to water in a
swimming pool. What then is the total pressure at that depth?
BUOYANT FORCE AND ARCHIMEDES’ PRINCIPLE: Why one manages to stay afloat.
Archimedes’ Principle:
“Any object placed in a fluid will experience an upward or buoyant force equal to the weight of
the fluid it displaces.”
- This principle applies both to liquids and gases and to objects which are completely or
partially submerged.
Objects float because the upward force on the bottom of the object is larger than the downward
force in the top of the object. This net upward force, called buoyant force is equal to the weight of
the fluid displaced or
BF=wfl
When the object floats, its weight is completely supported by the fluid
BF=wobj
Therefore,
w obj=wfl
Note that the fraction of the object that is submerged is equal to the ratio of the density of the
object to the density of the fluid. That is,
ρobj V fl
= =fraction submerged
ρfl V obj
This is true for any object floating in any liquid.