Idea04
- 194
- 1
Does water that encounters pressure difference or slight resistance have the same flow rate if there were no pressure difference's or resistance at all?
For flow in a pipe with no losses, the energy density is constant (Bernoulli's equation):Idea04 said:Does water that encounters pressure difference or slight resistance have the same flow rate if there were no pressure difference's or resistance at all?
No. If there were no weight pushing down in the large column, the water would move faster. Think about it in terms of energy. If the energy of the incoming water is not used in lifting the weight, what must be happening to the energy of the water in the large side? (Hint: apply Bernoulli's equation)Idea04 said:well I'm talking about water flowing vertically downward through a pipe. Then enters upward through a larger column filled with water with a piston or weight on top pushing downward on the water. but the pressure in the larger column is lower than the pipe flowing downward. Would the flow entering the large column still be the same as it would be if there were no pressure pushing downward in the larger column?
It is all about pressure. Water will flow from higher pressure to lower pressure.Idea04 said:so if I'm to get this right the weight pushing down exerts pressure and will slow the amount of water entering the column. so when the column has less water in it, the flow rate would increase compared to if the column has a higher amount of water in it.
Why? Analyse the forces on the weight. What is the force pushing it down? What is the force that opposes it? How do they compare?Idea04 said:Ok then. But if we reverse that flow and the weight lowers pushing the water out, Will the flow be the same even though the pressure drops with depth? Because wouldn't the weight always lower at a constant rate?