Lecture 26 - Fluid Forces Flashcards

1
Q

what is a fluid?

A
  • liquid or gas
  • anything that will fill the container it is in
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2
Q

what is drag force?

A
  • when we move through a fluid, the fluid applies a drag force
  • drag force slows our motion down
  • we must split the fluid and close it behind us which takes energy (drag force)
  • drag opposes the motion (like friction)
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3
Q

what reduces drag force in sports?

A
  • when someone in front of you is breaking the fluid, you can stay in the space behind and use less energy
  • used by cyclists and nascar
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4
Q

what is the equation for calculating drag force?

A
  • Fdrag = 1/2 pv^2CdragA
  • Fdrag = is drag force
  • p (roe) is density of air
  • Cdrag = drag of coefficient of the projectile
  • A = cross-sectional area
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5
Q

how is drag coefficient affected by streamlining?

A
  • drag coefficient is smaller with streamlining
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6
Q

what is the cross-sectional area?

A
  • the area of the structure ‘presented to the flow’
  • can make this smaller by bringing their arms in
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7
Q

what is relative velocity?

A
  • the velocity between the fluid and the object
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8
Q

compare the drag and velocity of head wind vs tail wind

A
  • head wind = anterior wind, against the direction of movement, larger relative velocity with greater drag (ex: 20+5 = 25 m/sec)
  • tail wind = posterior wind, assisting the direction of movement, smaller relative velocity with less drag (ex: 20-5 = 15 m/sec)
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9
Q

what is sidewind and relative velocity?

A
  • fluid is moving to the side (alongside head/tail wind)
  • lateral component to the fluid velocity that the object fells
  • drag force is angled relative to the objects pathway
  • ex: plane landing in a storm
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10
Q

what is drag force direction?

A
  • the drag force direction changes during the flight since the direction of the velocity of the object changes with its parabolic path
  • ex: as the ball goes up, drag force pulls down, as the ball falls down, drag force pushes up
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11
Q

where does drag force come from? (what are the two sources)

A
  • skin drag and profile drag
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12
Q

what is skin drag?

A
  • the friction between the surface of the object and the fluid as it passes over
  • the fluid immediately next to the surface is in fact stuck to the surface and not moving
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13
Q

what is profile drag?

A
  • the drag caused by the separation of the boundary layer from a surface and the wake created by that separation
  • when an object “splits” the fluid, and the fluid has to reconnect
  • the lower pressure behind the object that “sucks” the object backwards
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14
Q

what is the boundary layer?

A
  • the space between the non-moving surface layer and the undisturbed fluid flow
  • this is opposed by the viscosity of the fluid
  • gets thin and viscous in water/honey
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15
Q

what is laminar flow?

A
  • when viscosity is really high or moving really slow
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16
Q

how does viscosity affect skin drag?

A
  • greater viscosity has greater skin drag (aka water > honey)
17
Q

why does a golf ball have dimples?

A
  • make the boundary level more turbulent (narrower)
  • reduces skin drag and allows the ball to travel further since its drag is less (makes a thinner wake)
18
Q

how does region size affect profile drag?

A
  • smaller region = less profile drag
  • larger region = higher profile drag
19
Q

what is the angle of attack?

A
  • the angle at which the object approaches the fluid flow
  • larger angle of attack = larger profile drag
20
Q

what is streamlining?

A
  • get rid of the wake (fill the back with material)
  • reduces the pressure pull in the back and helps reconnect the fluid flow
21
Q

how is streamlining beneficial to profile drag?

A
  • must be oriented properly with respect to the fluid flow
  • otherwise can actually increase profile drag
22
Q

what is lift force?

A
  • a force that acts at a right angle to drag
  • arises due to Bernoulli’s principle (faster fluid flow creates lower pressure)
  • lower pressure ‘sucks’ on the object
  • perpendicular to relative flow direction and drag force
23
Q

what is the equation for lift force?

A

F lift = 1/2 pv^2C lift A
- C lift = life coefficient

24
Q

how does angle of attack influence lift force?

A
  • greater angle of attack = greater lift
  • angle of attack is the angle between direction of flow and discus
25
Q

what is stalling?

A
  • too large of an angle of attack causes the drag to be too large and therefore makes the object stall
26
Q

what is the lift to drag ratio?

A
  • high enough angle to get lift, but low enough angle to get limited drag