- Jan 9, 2001
- 7,572
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I'm just not a scientific thinker I guess. I'm ok with a lot of stuff, but fluids has me stumped.
23) (see diagram) A water tower (spherical reservoir) contains 5.25x10^5 kg of water when full. The reservoir is vented to the atmosphere at the top. For a full reservoir, find the gauge pressure that the water has at the faucet at house A and house B. Ignore the diameter of the delivery pipes.
I have absolutely no idea on that one. I know p=m/v, other than that, I'm really clueless (sorry, I was sick the day he explained this stuff). Any help?
There's another problem that's givine me trouble, but rather than spelling the whole thing out, I'll just ask a specific question: I'm trying to find the torque of something. Something is applying pressure to rotate something else. I have a distance from the axis of rotation to where the pressure is being applied. I have the pressure. I have the radius of the tube the pressure is being applied through (it's a hydraulic oil pump). I know T=Fd in this case. I have the d, so I need the force. How do I use the information about pressure to find the force? Where does the radius of the tube come in?
Thanks guys...that'll teach me to get sick.
23) (see diagram) A water tower (spherical reservoir) contains 5.25x10^5 kg of water when full. The reservoir is vented to the atmosphere at the top. For a full reservoir, find the gauge pressure that the water has at the faucet at house A and house B. Ignore the diameter of the delivery pipes.
I have absolutely no idea on that one. I know p=m/v, other than that, I'm really clueless (sorry, I was sick the day he explained this stuff). Any help?
There's another problem that's givine me trouble, but rather than spelling the whole thing out, I'll just ask a specific question: I'm trying to find the torque of something. Something is applying pressure to rotate something else. I have a distance from the axis of rotation to where the pressure is being applied. I have the pressure. I have the radius of the tube the pressure is being applied through (it's a hydraulic oil pump). I know T=Fd in this case. I have the d, so I need the force. How do I use the information about pressure to find the force? Where does the radius of the tube come in?
Thanks guys...that'll teach me to get sick.
