Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781337553292
Author: Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 14, Problem 30P
An airplane has a mass of 1.60 × 104 kg, and each wing has an area of 40.0 m2. During level flight, the pressure on the lower wing surface is 7.00 × 104 Pa. (a) Suppose the lift on the airplane were due to a pressure difference alone. Determine the pressure on the upper wing surface. (b) More realistically, a significant part of the lift is due to deflection of air downward by the wing. Does the inclusion of this force mean that the pressure in part (a) is higher or lower? Explain.
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Chapter 14 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics
Ch. 14.1 - Suppose you are standing directly behind someone...Ch. 14.2 - The pressure at the bottom of a filled glass of...Ch. 14.3 - Several common barometers are built, with a...Ch. 14.4 - You are shipwrecked and floating in the middle of...Ch. 14.6 - You observe two helium balloons floating next to...Ch. 14 - A large man sits on a four-legged chair with his...Ch. 14 - Prob. 2PCh. 14 - Estimate the total mass of the Earths atmosphere....Ch. 14 - Prob. 4PCh. 14 - Prob. 5P
Ch. 14 - Prob. 6PCh. 14 - Review. A solid sphere of brass (bulk modulus of...Ch. 14 - The human brain and spinal cord are immersed in...Ch. 14 - Blaise Pascal duplicated Torricellis barometer...Ch. 14 - Prob. 10PCh. 14 - Prob. 11PCh. 14 - A 10.0-kg block of metal measuring 12.0 cm by 10.0...Ch. 14 - A plastic sphere floats in water with 50.0% of its...Ch. 14 - The weight of a rectangular block of low-density...Ch. 14 - A wooden block of volume 5.24 104 m3 floats in...Ch. 14 - A hydrometer is an instrument used to determine...Ch. 14 - Prob. 17PCh. 14 - Prob. 18PCh. 14 - Prob. 19PCh. 14 - Water flowing through a garden hose of diameter...Ch. 14 - Water falls over a dam of height h with a mass...Ch. 14 - A legendary Dutch boy saved Holland by plugging a...Ch. 14 - Water is pumped up from the Colorado River to...Ch. 14 - Prob. 24PCh. 14 - Review. Old Faithful Geyser in Yellowstone...Ch. 14 - You are working as an expert witness for the owner...Ch. 14 - A thin 1.50-mm coating of glycerin has been placed...Ch. 14 - A hypodermic needle is 3.00 cm in length and 0.300...Ch. 14 - What radius needle should be used to inject a...Ch. 14 - An airplane has a mass of 1.60 104 kg, and each...Ch. 14 - Prob. 31PCh. 14 - Decades ago, it was thought that huge herbivorous...Ch. 14 - Prob. 33APCh. 14 - The true weight of an object can be measured in a...Ch. 14 - Prob. 35APCh. 14 - Review. Assume a certain liquid, with density 1...Ch. 14 - Evangelista Torricelli was the first person to...Ch. 14 - A common parameter that can be used to predict...Ch. 14 - In 1983, the United States began coining the...Ch. 14 - Review. With reference to the dam studied in...Ch. 14 - The spirit-in-glass thermometer, invented in...Ch. 14 - A woman is draining her fish tank by siphoning the...Ch. 14 - Prob. 43APCh. 14 - Prob. 44APCh. 14 - Prob. 45APCh. 14 - Review. In a water pistol, a piston drives water...Ch. 14 - Prob. 47APCh. 14 - Prob. 48APCh. 14 - Prob. 49CPCh. 14 - Prob. 50CP
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- The gravitational force exerted on a solid object is 5.00 N. When the object is suspended from a spring scale and submerged in water, the scale reads 3.50 N (Fig. P15.24). Find the density of the object. Figure P15.24 Problems 24 and 25.arrow_forwardThe pressure at the bottom of a glass filled with water ( = 1 000 kg/m3) is P. The water is poured out and the glass is filled with ethyl alcohol ( = 806 kg/m3). The pressure at the bottom of the glass is now (a) smaller than P (b) equal to P (c) larger than P (d) indeterminate.arrow_forwardMercury is poured into a U-tube as shown in Figure P15.17a. The left arm of the tube has cross-sectional area A1 of 10.0 cm2, and the right arm has a cross-sectional area A2 of 5.00 cm2. One hundred grams of water are then poured into the right arm as shown in Figure P15.17b. (a) Determine the length of the water column in the right arm of the U-tube. (b) Given that the density of mercury is 13.6 g/cm3, what distance h does the mercury rise in the left arm?arrow_forward
- Water enters a smooth, horizontal tube with a speed of 2.0 m/s and emerges out of the tube with a speed of 8.0 m/s. Each end of the tube has a different cross-sectional radius. Find the ratio of the entrance radius to the exit radius.arrow_forwardFigure P15.52 shows a Venturi meter, which may be used to measure the speed of a fluid. It consists of a Venturi tube through which the fluid moves and a manometer used to measure the pressure difference between regions 1 and 2. The fluid of density tube moves from left to right in the Venturi tube. Its speed in region 1 is v1, and its speed in region 2 is v2. The necks cross-sectional area is A2, and the cross-sectional area of the rest of the tube is A1. The manometer contains a fluid of density mano. a. Do you expect the fluid to be higher on the left side or the right side of the manometer? b. The speed v2 of the fluid in the neck comes from measuring the difference between the heights (yR yL) of the fluid on the two sides of manometer. Derive an expression for v2 in terms of (yR yL), A1, A2, tube, and mano. FIGURE P15.52arrow_forwardA tank with a flat bottom of area A and vertical sides is filled to a depth h with water. The pressure is P0 at the top surface. (a) What is the absolute pressure at the bottom of the tank? (b) Suppose an object of mass M and density less than the density of water is placed into the tank and floats. No water overflows. What is the resulting increase in pressure at the bottom of the tank?arrow_forward
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