Fluid As A Continuum
Fluid As A Continuum
Fluid as a Continuum
Fluid as a Continuum
The limiting volume * is about 10-9 mm3 for all liquids and
for gases at atmospheric pressure.
10-9 mm3 of air at standard conditions contains approximately
3x107 molecules, which is sufficient to define a nearly constant
density.
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Fluid as a Continuum
Buoyancy
Two laws of buoyancy discovered by Archimedes in the third
century B.C.:
1. A body immersed in a fluid experiences a vertical buoyant force
equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces.
2. A floating body displaces its own weight in the fluid in which it
floats.
These two laws are easily derived by referring to the Fig. The body
lies between an upper curved surface 1 and a lower curved surface 2.
The body experiences a net upward force
Buoyancy
Alternatively, we can sum the vertical forces on elemental
slices through the immersed body as shown in the Fig.:
This result is
identical to the
previous one and
equivalent to law I
above.
Here, it is assumed
that the fluid has
uniform specific
weight.
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Buoyancy
The line of action of the buoyant force passes through the
centroid of the displaced liquid volume only if it has uniform
density.
This point through which FB acts is called the center of
buoyancy.
Of course, the center of buoyancy may or may not correspond
to the actual center of mass of the body's own material, which
may have variable density.
Buoyancy
Gases also exert buoyancy on any body immersed in them.
For example, human beings have an average specific weight of
about 60 lbf/ft3. If the weight of a person is 180 lbf, the
person's total volume will be 3.0 ft3.
However, in so doing we are neglecting the buoyant force of
the air surrounding the person. At standard conditions, the
specific weight of air is 0.0763 lbf/ft3; hence the buoyant force
is approximately 0.23 lbf. If measured in vacuo, the person
would weigh about 0.23 lbf more.
For balloons, the buoyant force of air, instead of being
negligible, is the controlling factor in the design.
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Not only does the buoyant force equal the body weight but also
they are collinear since there can be no net moments for static
equilibrium. The above equation is the mathematical
equivalent of Archimedes' law 2.
Occasionally, a body will have exactly the right weight and
volume for its ratio to equal the specific weight of the fluid. If
so, the body will be neutrally buoyant and remain at rest at
any point where it is immersed in the fluid. Small neutrally
buoyant particles are sometime used for flow visualization.
A submarine can achieve positive, neutral, or negative
buoyancy by pumping water in or out of its ballast
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