Calculating water pressure in a horizontal pipe

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
4 replies · 5K views
Pushoam
Messages
961
Reaction score
53

Homework Statement


upload_2017-12-23_1-0-50.png


Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


Calculating water pressure using in a horizontal pipe

Applying Bernoulli principle,

## p_a + \frac 1 2 \rho gh_a + \frac 1 2 \rho v_a^2 = p_b + \frac 1 2 \rho gh_b + \frac 1 2 \rho v_b^2 ##

## h_a = h_b, v_b = \frac { A_a v_a}{A_b} ##

Substituting the values gives, ## p_a = 3 * 10^5 ~ N\m^2 ## .

Is this correct?
 

Attachments

  • upload_2017-12-23_1-0-50.png
    upload_2017-12-23_1-0-50.png
    16.7 KB · Views: 2,182
on Phys.org
Pushoam said:
## p_a + \frac 1 2 \rho gh_a + \frac 1 2 \rho v_a^2 = p_b + \frac 1 2 \rho gh_b + \frac 1 2 \rho v_b^2 ##
Your ##\rho g h## terms aren't written correctly. But this didn't affect your answer, which looks correct to m.
 
TSny said:
Your ##\rho g h## terms aren't written correctly. But this didn't affect your answer, which looks correct to m.
##\rho g h## terms correspond to potential energies, the factor ½ should not be there. Right?