sameeralord said:
When you go on a boat and use the paddle and displace water molecules you create low water pressure right?
and higher water pressure aft of the paddle.
Then why does the boat move forward?
You exert an aft force on the paddle, coexistant with you also exerting a forwards force on the boat. The paddle exerts an aft force on the water, coexistant with the water exerting a forwards force on you. The foward force you exert on the boat coexists with the boat exerting a backwards force on you. The boat exerts a forward force on the water, coexistant with the water exerting a backwards force on you. If the forward force exerted by you on the boat exceeds the backwards force exerted by the water on the boat, the boat accelerates. If the forces are equal in magnitude over time, then the boat moves at constant speed.
Momentum is conserved within a closed system, so the linear and angular momentum of the earth, water, and the boat with you in it are conserved. If the boat is accelerated forwards from rest, then the water in the lake or river and/or Earth are accelerated backwards by a very tiny amount.
I know water would flow from high (pressure) to low (pressure) but how can you specfically know that water would fly from high to low in forward direction, can't it happen in any direction?
It could, but the paddle imparts a force in an aft direction, causing the water to accelerate in an aft direction, and the waters momentum tends to cause it to flow in that direction. Note that the paddle induces an aft flow, while at the same time creating a low pressure zone fore of the paddle, and high pressure zone aft of the paddle. If not for the presence of the paddle, the flow would be forwards from the high pressure zone aft of where the paddle was towards the low pressure zone forwards of where the paddle was. However, with the presence of the paddle, the flow can't go through the paddle (just around it), and so the paddle induces a flow as well as a pressure differential.