fog37 said:
Thank you. I would like to better understand these ideas and use only one type of pressure without having to distinguish between static and dynamic pressure.
1) Let's consider the public water supply and a closed horizontal pipe of uniform cross-sectional area A containing water. If the pipe was closed at both end the fluid will be static and the applied pressure p1 at the left pipe surface would be the same as the pressure at the right closing surface. What would happen if we opened the right pipe's end? The fluid will start flowing out. If the fluid was ideal (no viscosity) the gauge pressure at intermediate points along the pipe (which has no narrowing or down/up bends) will be the same in respect of Bernoulli's equation.
You can't apply the conventional Bernoulli equation to this situation because it is an unsteady-state (transient flow).
Will that measured pressure be the same as the pressure p1 applied to the left surface to get the flow started? What happens in this ideal case? What would the pressure be at the very open end of the pipe where the fluid comes out?
Assuming the pipe is horizontal, fluid would start coming out the bottom portion of the pipe exit, and air would start flowing into the top half of the pipe. The behavior would be dominated by gravitiational effects. At the exit, the pressure would be atmospheric (at least at the free surfaces), and, if the fluid were considered incompressible, the pressure throughout the pipe would drop to nearly atmospheric (aside from the local hydrostatic head). As air entered, the greatest depth would be near the closed end, and the least depth would be at open end. Locally, the pressure variation would be nearly hydrostatic vertically, but, because of the depth variation, there would be horizontal pressure variations below the surface. This would provide the driving force for the liquid flow.
How would we even measure that? In the case of a water hose, if we put our thumb over the open end and let just a little bit of water come out, we surely reduce the flow rate (gmp) but increase the pressure? How would we measure the pressure at the open end? Water would be moving and have kinetic energy. If that moving water hit surface once it exited the hose we could talk about pressure on that surface...The measurement of pressure seems to require an impact with a surface...
At and after the exit, the pressure at the free surfaces would be atmospheric. Within the flow region after the exit, the fluid parcels would pretty much be in free fall, and the downward accelerations would cancel the hydrostatic varitation. So pressure would be nearly constant throughout the jet. The pressure could be measured by orienting the device normal to the velocity streamlines.
All this could not only be measured, but, for this complicated 2-3D flow, it could also be calculated using a fluid mechanics model.
2) If fluid was real and viscous, a pressure gauge located at intermediate points along the pipe would read smaller and smaller pressure values as we get more distant from the left end of the pipe. I know that pressure loss in piping without any size changes or fittings occurs due to friction between the fluid and the pipe walls.
Correct.
3) Chestermiller mentioned that the pressure at the free surface of the water jet is atmospheric (zero gauge). Pressure is isotopic, meaning it is the same in all directions (Pascal's law). So water doesn't have a different value axially than it has radially. So, yes, the water pressure inside the jet is zero gauge.
So, neglecting the pressure increase due to depth, the pressure inside a fluid flowing in a river would be the same as atmospheric pressure the same as when the fluid is static? In the static case, the pressure at the free surface is p_0 (atmospheric pressure) and pressure increases linearly with depth according to p = p_0+rho*g*d. I agree that pressure is isotropic (same strength in all direction at a specific point inside the fluid). Spatial points at the same level has the same pressure...
Saying that you are neglecting the pressure increase due to depth is the same as saying that you are neglecting hydrostatic pressure variations. I don't think you mean that.
And if the fluid is in motion?
If the fluid in a river is in motion, then the elevation is decreasing from upstream to downstream and the depth may also be decreasing. Vertically, the pressure variation will be nearly hydrostatic, but horizontally, there will be a pressure gradient at all depths below the surface that drive the flow downstream.
I would think that the if we placed a pressure measuring device inside the flow, we would measure a different pressure due to the kinetic energy of the fluid when it impacts with the device...
Again, you would vary the orientation of the pressure measuring device until it showed a minimum. It would then be oriented perpendicular to the streamlines, and there would be no stagnation effect.