Jeff Reid said:
That pressure can't be sensed unless the air is accelerated though.
russ_watters said:
Huh? I'm not following any of that. Bernoulli's equation measures the speed of the air, not the acceleration of the air. You can only get the acceleration by measuring the speed in two different places and subtracting.
Bernoulli's principle only applies when the acceleration is due to internal forces, pressure differentials, or gravitational potental energy per unit volume. Bernoulli relates the pressure and speeds during accelerations or changes in height. Assuming constant height, Bernoulli equation is derived based on acceleration:
wiki_derivation.html
As a common example to an exception of Bernoulli principle, the flow just aft of a propeller or fan has increased pressure and nearly the same speed, because the propeller or fan perform work on the air, changing it's total energy, violating Bernoulli principle. You need a more complicated (than Bernoulli) process to calculate the pressure jump across the virtual disk swept out by a propeller or fan. Afterwards, the flow's higher pressure causes it to accelerate towards the ambient pressure air further downstream, following Bernoulli's principle (ignoring issues like viscosity and turbulence).
Jeff Reid said:
russ_watters said:
Another way is that the pressure applied to the air pushes the air out of the balloon and since forces come in pairs, the air leaving the balloon is also pushing the balloon forward. You can choose to apply bernoulli's principle to it.
Bernoulli's principle would apply to the air expelled by the balloon, and Bernoulli could be used to calculate the terminal velocity of the expelled air, but you'd also need to know the mass flow rate in order to determine thrust. You could also assume that the pressure at the exit nozzle of the balloon was ambient, then use (static_pressure_in_balloon - exit_pressure_at_nozzle) x (cross_sectional_area_of_nozzle) to calculate force, but I don't know how accurate this alternate method would be.
In the real world, because of wall friction and viscosity, in a constant diameter pipe, the flow and speed remain constant, but the pressure decreases with distance. I assume that mechanical energy is being converted into heat energy and then dissipated by the pipe, and this violates Bernoulli.
Getting back to the OP:
jpas said:
referential S v1=0, referential R v2=0
Bernoulli describes what happens when a fluid or gas accelerates from a higher pressure zone to a lower pressure zone (ignoring gravity, viscosity, turbulence, ...). Although dynamic pressure is related to velocity, it doesn't make sense to choose a reference frame that is not interacting with the flow. For example, assuming that you have a Bernoulli compliant flow in a clear pipe and observe that flow from outside that pipe while traveling at speed v
1 for case S and v
2 for case R. The point here is that the speed of the observer will not have any affect on the static pressure of the fluid in the pipe at any point in that pipe. Within the Bernoulli compliant pipe, the pressures and speeds with respect to the pipe will be compliant with Bernoulli, but Bernoulli equation will not apply when using reference frames S or R. For example, mass flow is constant within a pipe, but how can you have mass flow if the observed velocity is zero?