S'identifier

When a fluid is in constant acceleration, the pressure and buoyant force equations are modified. Suppose a beaker is placed in an elevator accelerating upward with a constant acceleration, a. In the beaker, assume there is a thin cylinder of height h with an infinitesimal cross-sectional area, ΔS.

The motion of the liquid within this infinitesimal cylinder is considered to obtain the pressure difference. Three vertical forces act on this liquid:

  1. An upward force due to the liquid present below the bottom surface of the cylinder.
  2. A downward force due to the liquid above the top surface of the cylinder.
  3. A downward force is due to weight of the cylindrical element.

Under these three forces, the liquid accelerates upward. Using Newton's second law, the following expression is obtained:

Equation1

Representing the fluid element's mass in terms of density () simplifies the equation, and the expression for the pressure difference for an accelerating fluid is obtained.

Equation2

To obtain the buoyant force, assume a body is dipped inside the same accelerating liquid. It experiences buoyant force and force due to its weight. For simplicity, the body is replaced by an equal volume of the same liquid. From Newton's second law, the buoyant force is expressed in terms of acceleration, and the following expression is obtained:

Equation3

Tags
Accelerating FluidsPressure DifferenceBuoyant ForceConstant AccelerationNewton s Second LawLiquid DynamicsFluid MechanicsUpward ForceDownward ForceCylindrical ElementDensityLiquid Motion

Du chapitre 13:

article

Now Playing

13.11 : Accelerating Fluids

Mécanique des fluides

944 Vues

article

13.1 : Caractéristiques des fluides

Mécanique des fluides

3.4K Vues

article

13.2 : Densité

Mécanique des fluides

11.4K Vues

article

13.3 : Pression des fluides

Mécanique des fluides

11.8K Vues

article

13.4 : Variation de la pression atmosphérique

Mécanique des fluides

1.8K Vues

article

13.5 : Le principe de Pascal

Mécanique des fluides

7.6K Vues

article

13.6 : Application du principe de Pascal

Mécanique des fluides

7.6K Vues

article

13.7 : Manomètres

Mécanique des fluides

2.7K Vues

article

13.8 : Flottabilité

Mécanique des fluides

5.7K Vues

article

13.9 : Le principe d'Archimède

Mécanique des fluides

7.4K Vues

article

13.10 : Densité et poussée d'Archimède

Mécanique des fluides

6.4K Vues

article

13.12 : Tension superficielle et énergie superficielle

Mécanique des fluides

1.2K Vues

article

13.13 : Excès de pression à l’intérieur d’une goutte et d’une bulle

Mécanique des fluides

1.5K Vues

article

13.14 : Contact Angle

Mécanique des fluides

11.3K Vues

article

13.15 : Remontée de liquide dans un tube capillaire

Mécanique des fluides

1.1K Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.