Is the transfer of energy in hydraulics truly instant?

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Energy transfer in hydraulics and mechanical systems is not instantaneous; it propagates at the speed of sound in the material. If a pole one light-year long is pulled at one end, the other end would not experience movement instantly, but rather with a delay determined by the speed of sound in the pole. Similarly, electrical impulses travel at a fraction of the speed of light, influenced by the wire's insulators. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding the physics behind force propagation and the limitations of instantaneous movement. Further research is encouraged to grasp these concepts more fully.
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Hello,

This is my first ever post in an entirely science-dedicated forum. On another forum, another user and I theorized that the energy transfer in hydraulics from one point to another is instant. He initially posted about electricity being instant because electrons move at the same speed throughout a metal, and together we came up with this question:

If I managed to make a pole one light-year long, and I pull on one end of this pole, would a friend standing at the other end of the pole experience this same movement instantly, or would there be a one-year delay?

It's baffled me, and I was wondering if any of you wonderful people could shed some light on this question. :biggrin:

Many thanks!
 
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Neither hydraulic impulse nor electricity travel "instantly".

If I managed to make a pole one light-year long, and I pull on one end of this pole, would a friend standing at the other end of the pole experience this same movement instantly, or would there be a one-year delay?
The effect of the pull would travel at the speed of sound in the pole, much slower than the speed of light--definitely not instantly!
 
For a mechanical pole yank, the force propagates at the speed of sound in the material of the pole. Similarly for hydraulics.

For electricity propagating on wires, the impulse travels at a fraction of the speed of light -- the fraction depends on some of the characteristics of the insulators around the wire, etc.

Nothing is instantaneous. You and your friend should stop speculating and do some reading. Welcome to the PF, BTW. Be sure that you've read and understood the PF Guidelines before getting too crazy with more posts:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=5374
 
Thank you Doc! :)

You seem very certain about it being the speed of sound. Does this not mean the the pole will be longer for part of the energy transfer?

Berke, thank you for the link. I will be sure to follow the guidelines. I will do further reading about forces, and thanks for your welcome!
 
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Helios223 said:
Does this not mean the the pole will be longer for part of the energy transfer?
Absolutely... it will stretch a bit.
 
Doc Al said:
Absolutely... it will stretch a bit.

Ah, that makes this much clearer. It seems I need to research these theories more before I jump to conclusions.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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