no1schuifan said:
Firstly, in the bernoull equation: Static pressure + dynamic pressure = constant.
This only occurs in the ideal (imanginary) case where an exchange between pressure and speed
2 occurs without performing any net work on the fluid or gas. In a real world situation, the pressure and or speed isn't going to change unless there's some mechanical interaction causing the change (such as a solid moving through the air), so the total pressure is changed, and how this is distributed between static and dynamic pressure depends on the mechanical interaction.
Take the case of a propeller, and consider the shape swept by the path of the propeller to be a disk. For the flow across the disk, the speed stays about the same, but the pressure jumps from below ambient to above ambient, and the air then continues to accelerate aft of the propeller. The concept is convered in this NASA link:
But at the exit, the velocity is greater than free stream because the propeller does work on the airflow. We can apply Bernoulli'sequation to the air in front of the propeller and to the air behind the propeller. But we cannot apply Bernoulli's equation across the propeller disk because the work performed by the engine (by the propeller)
violates an assumption used to derive the equation. :
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/propanl.html
What exactly is the static pressure?
The static pressure is the pressure of the air as sensed by an observer moving at the same speed as that air. The total pressure is the pressure sensed after slowing down the air to the same speed as the observer. The dynamic pressure is the total pressure - static pressure.
In the case of the propeller, the static pressure is lowest just fore of the propeller disk and highest just aft of the propeller disk. The dynamic pressure is relative to speed
2, and is highest well aft of the propeller, at the "exit velocity" as described in that NASA link above.
More about car aerodynamics and diffusers at this link. Note that the diffuser result in vortices, which make it difficult to use Bernoulli to approximate the lift and drag factors. Generally wind tunnels are used, because the math and the ability to predict turbulent flow is very difficult.
http://mhest.com/spotlight/automobiles/articles/Race-CarAerodynamics.pdf
It is possible to sense the static pressure of moving air with a static port. The port is a flush mounted tube where the tube opening ''hides" under a thin boundary layer of air that doesn't move with the moving air just outside the thin boundary layer. Because of viscosity, the air transitions from moving at the same speed as the static port to the speed of the air beyond the boundary layer, but the pressure sensed at the port opening will be very close to the case where the static port was moving with the outside air. The tube is connected to a chamber with a diaphram used to calculate altitude in an aircraft. It also provides a static pressure reference for the pitot tube which is pointed into the direction of the air, and senses the total pressure, and the difference total pressure - static pressure = dynamic pressure, which is related to speed
2, and this is used to indicate the air speed on an aircraft (not a true speed, but more of mass flow speed, since it's sensitive to the density of the air at various altitudes). Sometimes the pitot and static port are combined into a single device.
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/pitot.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitot_tube
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitot-static_system
http://www.luizmonteiro.com/Learning_Pitot_Sim.aspx