I have a couple of brain blocks.

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a physics problem involving a U-tube filled with mercury and water, specifically calculating how much mercury rises on the right side when 11.2 cm of water is added to the left side. The participant uses the equation relating pressure and density to derive the height change of mercury, concluding that it rises by 0.412 cm. A key point raised is the use of (1/2 * h) in the calculations, which is clarified through the understanding of the water-mercury interface and the relationship between height changes on both sides of the U-tube. The density difference between mercury and water is emphasized, confirming that mercury remains beneath water in this scenario. Overall, the discussion highlights the importance of understanding fluid mechanics principles in solving such problems.
falcon0311
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I've got a U-tube filled with Mercury and water. If I add 11.2 cm of water to the left side, how much does the mercury rise on the right side?

For simplicity's sake, D will stand for density, p0 for initial pressure, w = water, m = mercury, h = 11.2 cm for the water and d = the distance the mercury rises, and g is gravity.

The equation I think I'm supposed to use is

p0 + Dw(g)(1/2 * h) = p0 + Dm(g)(d)

--> Dw(1/2 * h) = Dm(d)

d = [ Dw(1/2 * h) ] / Dm = [ 1,000 kg/m^3 ( 1/2 * 11.2 cm ) ] / 13.6*10^3 kg/m^3

d = .412 cm which is what the book says, but my question is why did I use (1/2 * h) instead of h? Is there another way to do this problem?
 
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I believe the correct answer depends on whether it's mercury or water that occupies the lower, bent portion of the U-tube. Let's assume however that mercury fills the bottom. Then the water-mercury interface is on the left side (water side) at a point where the tube remains vertical. The importance of the interface position is that for a height change \inline{dx} of the mercury surface level, the distance change of the mercury surface to water-mercury interface is \inline{2dx}. Thus, if we add 11.2 cm of water to the left-hand side, then \inline{ \rho_w g [11.2 \text{ cm}]= \rho_m g [2dx] }.
 
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If the mercury level falls by x cm on the left side. then the mercury on the right side rises by x cm too relative to the initial level.

See the attached file. Do you know why now?

The density of mercury is greater than water, so it is always beneath water.
 
Thanks for the help; you cleared that up pretty well. :biggrin:
 
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