James O'Neill said:
The funnel has a rectangular cross section.
If the funnel is circular, does one use the circumferences?
Also, if the tide is 3 m/s, won't the water enter the funnel at 3 m/s?
Area is what matters, so
Rectangle is fine, so long as you say length & width.
For a circle we can calculate the area from any specified measurement. And since we only need the ratio of the areas, we can use the ratio of the lengths
2 whether they be radii, diameters or circumferences.
If the tide is 3m/s, it will not enter the funnel at that speed.
The water must slow down in order to create some pressure to force the water through the funnel. (Pse excuse intuitive rather than Physics language. I'm sure others can do that better than me.)
The water going through the funnel must speed up. Volume in = volume out, so if the area gets smaller, the water must go faster.
But the same mass of water is going out as coming in, so if it speeds up there is an increase in KE.
Energy is never free, so where does it come from? The pressure of the water going in is higher than the pressure of the water coming out.
Pressure times area is force. Force times velocity is power.
So the water being pushed into the funnel is having work done on it and it is this work which provides the energy to increase the KE.
Where does this pressure come from? From the water slowing down as it approaches the obstruction. In fact a lot more water than goes through the funnel is also slowed down and the total loss of KE of all that water is what provides the energy to speed up the water through the funnel.