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Chapter 4 of 14
NCERT Solutions

Mechanical Properties of Fluids

Uttar Pradesh Board · Class 11 · Physics

NCERT Solutions for Mechanical Properties of Fluids — Uttar Pradesh Board Class 11 Physics.

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EXERCISES

9.1Explain why
(a) The blood pressure in humans is greater at the feet than at the brain
(b) Atmospheric pressure at a height of about 6 km decreases to nearly half of its value at the sea level, though the height of the atmosphere is more than 100 km
(c) Hydrostatic pressure is a scalar quantity even though pressure is force divided by area.
Show solution
(a) Blood pressure greater at feet than at brain:

The pressure in a fluid at rest increases with depth according to P=P0+ρghP = P_0 + \rho g h. The feet are at a much greater vertical distance (height hh) below the heart compared to the brain. Therefore, the blood pressure at the feet is greater than at the brain by an amount ρgh\rho g h, where hh is the height difference between the brain and the feet.

(b) Atmospheric pressure halves at ~6 km:

The atmosphere is not a liquid of uniform density. The density of air decreases rapidly with altitude. Most of the mass of the atmosphere is concentrated in the lower layers (near the Earth's surface). Since pressure at any point equals the weight of the air column above it per unit area, and since most of the atmospheric mass lies below 6 km, the pressure at 6 km is nearly half the sea-level pressure. The upper layers (above 6 km) are very thin and contribute little to the total pressure.

(c) Hydrostatic pressure is a scalar:

Although pressure is defined as force per unit area (P=F/AP = F/A), the force here is the normal force exerted by the fluid on a surface. When we say pressure at a point in a fluid, it acts equally in all directions (Pascal's law). There is no unique direction associated with pressure at a point — it has the same magnitude regardless of the orientation of the surface element chosen. Hence, hydrostatic pressure is a scalar quantity.
9.2Explain why
(a) The angle of contact of mercury with glass is obtuse, while that of water with glass is acute.
(b) Water on a clean glass surface tends to spread out while mercury on the same surface tends to form drops.
(c) Surface tension of a liquid is independent of the area of the surface
(d) Water with detergent dissolved in it should have small angles of contact.
(e) A drop of liquid under no external forces is always spherical in shape
Show solution
(a) Angle of contact — mercury (obtuse) vs water (acute):

The angle of contact depends on the relative magnitudes of cohesive forces (between liquid molecules) and adhesive forces (between liquid and solid molecules).
- For mercury–glass: Cohesive forces between mercury molecules are much stronger than the adhesive forces between mercury and glass. The mercury surface curves upward (convex meniscus), giving an obtuse angle of contact (> 90°).
- For water–glass: Adhesive forces between water and glass are stronger than the cohesive forces between water molecules. The water surface curves upward at the edges (concave meniscus), giving an acute angle of contact (< 90°).

(b) Water spreads on glass; mercury forms drops:

- Water on glass: Adhesive force (water–glass) > Cohesive force (water–water). Water molecules are attracted more to glass than to each other, so water spreads out to maximise contact with glass (wets glass).
- Mercury on glass: Cohesive force (mercury–mercury) > Adhesive force (mercury–glass). Mercury molecules prefer to stay together, so mercury pulls itself into drops to minimise contact with glass (does not wet glass).

(c) Surface tension is independent of area of the surface:

Surface tension is a property of the liquid–interface system at a given temperature. It is defined as the force per unit length (or surface energy per unit area) and arises from the intermolecular forces at the surface. These intermolecular forces are intrinsic to the liquid and do not depend on how large the surface is. Hence, surface tension is independent of the area of the surface.

(d) Detergent solution has small angle of contact:

Detergent molecules are surfactants — they have one hydrophilic (water-loving) end and one hydrophobic end. When dissolved in water, they reduce the surface tension of water significantly. A lower surface tension means the adhesive forces between the solution and the solid surface become relatively more dominant, reducing the angle of contact. A smaller angle of contact means better wetting, which is why detergents help in cleaning.

(e) A liquid drop is always spherical under no external forces:

In the absence of external forces, a liquid drop tends to minimise its surface energy (since surface energy = surface tension × area). For a given volume, the shape with the minimum surface area is a sphere. Therefore, surface tension causes the drop to contract to a spherical shape to minimise surface energy.
9.3Fill in the blanks using the word(s) from the list appended with each statement:
(a) Surface tension of liquids generally ... with temperatures (increases / decreases)
(b) Viscosity of gases ... with temperature, whereas viscosity of liquids ... with temperature (increases / decreases)
(c) For solids with elastic modulus of rigidity, the shearing force is proportional to ... , while for fluids it is proportional to ... (shear strain / rate of shear strain)
(d) For a fluid in a steady flow, the increase in flow speed at a constriction follows (conservation of mass / Bernoulli's principle)
(e) For the model of a plane in a wind tunnel, turbulence occurs at a ... speed for turbulence for an actual plane (greater / smaller)
Show solution
(a) Surface tension of liquids generally decreases with temperature.

*Reason*: As temperature increases, the intermolecular forces weaken, reducing surface tension.

(b) Viscosity of gases increases with temperature, whereas viscosity of liquids decreases with temperature.

*Reason*: In gases, viscosity arises from molecular collisions; more collisions at higher temperature → higher viscosity. In liquids, viscosity arises from intermolecular cohesion; higher temperature weakens cohesion → lower viscosity.

(c) For solids with elastic modulus of rigidity, the shearing force is proportional to shear strain, while for fluids it is proportional to rate of shear strain.

*Reason*: Solids resist deformation (Hooke's law: stress ∝ strain). Fluids continuously deform under shear stress, so stress ∝ rate of strain (Newton's law of viscosity).

(d) For a fluid in a steady flow, the increase in flow speed at a constriction follows conservation of mass (equation of continuity: Av=constantAv = \text{constant}).

*Reason*: The continuity equation A1v1=A2v2A_1v_1 = A_2v_2 directly gives the increase in speed at a constriction. Bernoulli's principle then explains the pressure change.

(e) For the model of a plane in a wind tunnel, turbulence occurs at a greater speed for turbulence for an actual plane.

*Reason*: The Reynolds number Re=ρvL/ηRe = \rho v L/\eta determines onset of turbulence. The model is smaller (smaller LL), so to achieve the same ReRe (and hence same flow conditions), the speed vv must be greater for the model.
9.4Explain why
(a) To keep a piece of paper horizontal, you should blow over, not under, it
(b) When we try to close a water tap with our fingers, fast jets of water gush through the openings between our fingers
(c) The size of the needle of a syringe controls flow rate better than the thumb pressure exerted by a doctor while administering an injection
(d) A fluid flowing out of a small hole in a vessel results in a backward thrust on the vessel
(e) A spinning cricket ball in air does not follow a parabolic trajectory
Show solution
(a) Blowing over the paper keeps it horizontal:

By Bernoulli's principle, P+12ρv2+ρgh=constantP + \frac{1}{2}\rho v^2 + \rho g h = \text{constant}. When you blow over the paper, the air speed above the paper increases, so the pressure above decreases. The pressure below (atmospheric) is now greater than the pressure above. This net upward pressure difference provides an upward force that keeps the paper horizontal. If you blow under, the pressure below decreases and the paper droops.

(b) Fast jets through finger gaps:

When we partially close the tap with fingers, we reduce the area of cross-section of the opening. By the equation of continuity (Av=constantAv = \text{constant}), as the area decreases, the velocity of water increases. Hence fast jets gush through the narrow openings between the fingers.

(c) Needle size controls flow rate better than thumb pressure:

By Poiseuille's law, the volume flow rate through a tube is:
Q=πr4ΔP8ηlQ = \frac{\pi r^4 \Delta P}{8 \eta l}
The flow rate depends on the fourth power of the radius rr of the needle. A small change in the needle's radius produces a very large change in flow rate (Qr4Q \propto r^4), whereas the flow rate depends only linearly on the pressure difference ΔP\Delta P. Therefore, the needle size (radius) is a far more sensitive control of flow rate than the thumb pressure.

(d) Backward thrust on the vessel:

This is a consequence of conservation of momentum (Newton's third law). When fluid flows out through a hole with momentum in the forward direction, by Newton's third law, an equal and opposite reaction force (backward thrust) acts on the vessel. This is the same principle as rocket propulsion.

(e) Spinning cricket ball does not follow parabolic trajectory:

A spinning cricket ball experiences the Magnus effect. Due to spin, the ball drags air around it. On one side, the spin-induced air velocity adds to the wind velocity (higher speed, lower pressure by Bernoulli's principle), and on the other side it opposes (lower speed, higher pressure). This pressure difference creates a net sideways (or upward/downward) force called the Magnus force, which deflects the ball from its parabolic trajectory. Hence the ball swings or curves in the air.
9.5A 50 kg girl wearing high heel shoes balances on a single heel. The heel is circular with a diameter 1.0 cm. What is the pressure exerted by the heel on the horizontal floor?Show solution
Given:
- Mass of girl, m=50 kgm = 50\ \text{kg}
- Diameter of heel, d=1.0 cm=1.0×102 md = 1.0\ \text{cm} = 1.0 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{m}
- Radius of heel, r=0.5 cm=0.5×102 mr = 0.5\ \text{cm} = 0.5 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{m}
- g=9.8 m s2g = 9.8\ \text{m s}^{-2}

Force exerted by heel on floor:
F=mg=50×9.8=490 NF = mg = 50 \times 9.8 = 490\ \text{N}

Area of heel (circular):
A=πr2=π×(0.5×102)2=π×0.25×104 m2A = \pi r^2 = \pi \times (0.5 \times 10^{-2})^2 = \pi \times 0.25 \times 10^{-4}\ \text{m}^2
A=7.854×105 m2A = 7.854 \times 10^{-5}\ \text{m}^2

Pressure:
P=FA=4907.854×105P = \frac{F}{A} = \frac{490}{7.854 \times 10^{-5}}
P6.24×106 Pa\boxed{P \approx 6.24 \times 10^{6}\ \text{Pa}}

This is about 60 times the atmospheric pressure — very high pressure due to the small area of the heel.
9.6Toricelli's barometer used mercury. Pascal duplicated it using French wine of density 984 kg m⁻³. Determine the height of the wine column for normal atmospheric pressure.Show solution
Given:
- Density of wine, ρwine=984 kg m3\rho_{\text{wine}} = 984\ \text{kg m}^{-3}
- Normal atmospheric pressure, P0=1.01×105 PaP_0 = 1.01 \times 10^5\ \text{Pa}
- g=9.8 m s2g = 9.8\ \text{m s}^{-2}

Concept: At the base of the barometer column, the pressure equals atmospheric pressure:
P0=ρghP_0 = \rho g h

Solving for height hh:
h=P0ρwineg=1.01×105984×9.8h = \frac{P_0}{\rho_{\text{wine}} \cdot g} = \frac{1.01 \times 10^5}{984 \times 9.8}
h=1.01×1059643.2h = \frac{1.01 \times 10^5}{9643.2}
h10.5 m\boxed{h \approx 10.5\ \text{m}}

This is much taller than the mercury barometer (~0.76 m) because wine is much less dense than mercury (ρHg=13,600 kg m3\rho_{\text{Hg}} = 13,600\ \text{kg m}^{-3}).
9.7A vertical off-shore structure is built to withstand a maximum stress of 10⁹ Pa. Is the structure suitable for putting up on top of an oil well in the ocean? Take the depth of the ocean to be roughly 3 km, and ignore ocean currents.Show solution
Given:
- Maximum stress the structure can withstand: Pmax=109 PaP_{\text{max}} = 10^9\ \text{Pa}
- Depth of ocean: h=3 km=3×103 mh = 3\ \text{km} = 3 \times 10^3\ \text{m}
- Density of sea water: ρ103 kg m3\rho \approx 10^3\ \text{kg m}^{-3}
- g=9.8 m s2g = 9.8\ \text{m s}^{-2}
- Atmospheric pressure: P0=1.01×105 PaP_0 = 1.01 \times 10^5\ \text{Pa}

Pressure at depth hh:
P=P0+ρghP = P_0 + \rho g h
P=1.01×105+(103)(9.8)(3×103)P = 1.01 \times 10^5 + (10^3)(9.8)(3 \times 10^3)
P=1.01×105+2.94×107P = 1.01 \times 10^5 + 2.94 \times 10^7
P2.94×107 Pa3×107 PaP \approx 2.94 \times 10^7\ \text{Pa} \approx 3 \times 10^7\ \text{Pa}

Comparison:
P3×107 Pa109 Pa=PmaxP \approx 3 \times 10^7\ \text{Pa} \ll 10^9\ \text{Pa} = P_{\text{max}}

Conclusion: The pressure at the ocean depth of 3 km is approximately 3×1073 \times 10^7 Pa, which is well below the maximum stress of 10910^9 Pa that the structure can withstand. Therefore, yes, the structure is suitable for the oil well.
9.8A hydraulic automobile lift is designed to lift cars with a maximum mass of 3000 kg. The area of cross-section of the piston carrying the load is 425 cm². What maximum pressure would the smaller piston have to bear?Show solution
Given:
- Maximum mass of car, m=3000 kgm = 3000\ \text{kg}
- Area of larger piston, A=425 cm2=425×104 m2A = 425\ \text{cm}^2 = 425 \times 10^{-4}\ \text{m}^2
- g=9.8 m s2g = 9.8\ \text{m s}^{-2}

Concept: By Pascal's law, the pressure transmitted through the hydraulic fluid is the same everywhere. The pressure on the larger piston equals the weight of the car divided by its area.

Force on larger piston:
F=mg=3000×9.8=2.94×104 NF = mg = 3000 \times 9.8 = 2.94 \times 10^4\ \text{N}

Pressure on larger piston (= pressure on smaller piston):
P=FA=2.94×104425×104P = \frac{F}{A} = \frac{2.94 \times 10^4}{425 \times 10^{-4}}
P=2.94×1044.25×102P = \frac{2.94 \times 10^4}{4.25 \times 10^{-2}}
P6.92×105 Pa\boxed{P \approx 6.92 \times 10^5\ \text{Pa}}

The smaller piston must bear a maximum pressure of approximately 6.92×1056.92 \times 10^5 Pa.
9.9A U-tube contains water and methylated spirit separated by mercury. The mercury columns in the two arms are in level with 10.0 cm of water in one arm and 12.5 cm of spirit in the other. What is the specific gravity of spirit?Show solution
Given:
- Height of water column, hw=10.0 cmh_w = 10.0\ \text{cm}
- Height of spirit column, hs=12.5 cmh_s = 12.5\ \text{cm}
- Mercury levels are equal in both arms.
- Density of water, ρw=1.0 g cm3\rho_w = 1.0\ \text{g cm}^{-3}
- Let density of spirit = ρs\rho_s

Concept: Since the mercury levels are the same in both arms, the pressure exerted by the water column on one side must equal the pressure exerted by the spirit column on the other side at the mercury surface level.

Equating pressures at the mercury level:
ρwghw=ρsghs\rho_w \cdot g \cdot h_w = \rho_s \cdot g \cdot h_s

ρs=ρw×hwhs=1.0×10.012.5\rho_s = \rho_w \times \frac{h_w}{h_s} = 1.0 \times \frac{10.0}{12.5}

ρs=0.8 g cm3\rho_s = 0.8\ \text{g cm}^{-3}

Specific gravity of spirit:
Specific gravity=ρsρw=0.81.0=0.8\text{Specific gravity} = \frac{\rho_s}{\rho_w} = \frac{0.8}{1.0} = \boxed{0.8}
9.10In the previous problem, if 15.0 cm of water and spirit each are further poured into the respective arms of the tube, what is the difference in the levels of mercury in the two arms? (Specific gravity of mercury = 13.6)Show solution
Given (from previous problem):
- Specific gravity of spirit, ρs=0.8 g cm3\rho_s = 0.8\ \text{g cm}^{-3}
- Specific gravity of mercury, ρHg=13.6 g cm3\rho_{Hg} = 13.6\ \text{g cm}^{-3}
- Additional water poured = 15.0 cm
- Additional spirit poured = 15.0 cm

Setup: Let the mercury level in the water arm fall by xx cm. Then the mercury level in the spirit arm rises by xx cm (mercury is incompressible, so the total mercury volume is conserved).

Total height of water column (original 10 cm + 15 cm added + mercury dropped by xx):
hwtotal=10+15+x=(25+x) cmh_w^{\text{total}} = 10 + 15 + x = (25 + x)\ \text{cm}

Total height of spirit column (original 12.5 cm + 15 cm added + mercury rose by xx, so spirit column effectively loses xx from below... wait — let me reconsider):

Actually, when mercury in the water arm falls by xx, the water column above it increases by xx. When mercury in the spirit arm rises by xx, the spirit column above it decreases by xx (spirit is pushed up).

Wait — the spirit column height above mercury = 12.5+15x=(27.5x)12.5 + 15 - x = (27.5 - x) cm.
The water column height above mercury = 10+15+x=(25+x)10 + 15 + x = (25 + x) cm.

Equating pressures at the lower mercury level (in the water arm):

Pressure at the bottom of the water arm mercury surface = Pressure at the bottom of the spirit arm mercury surface.

Let the mercury level difference be 2x2x (water arm mercury is lower by xx, spirit arm is higher by xx).

Pressure balance at the lower mercury level (water side):
ρwg(25+x)+ρHgg(2x)=ρsg(27.5x)+ρHgg(2x)\rho_w g (25 + x) + \rho_{Hg} g (2x) = \rho_s g (27.5 - x) + \rho_{Hg} g (2x)

Wait, let me redo this carefully.

Let mercury in the water arm go down by xx cm and mercury in the spirit arm go up by xx cm. The difference in mercury levels = 2x2x.

Pressure at the bottom of the U-tube must be equal from both sides. Taking the reference at the lower mercury surface (water arm side):

Left side (water arm): Pressure = ρwg(25+x)+Patm\rho_w g (25 + x) + P_{\text{atm}}

Right side (spirit arm): Pressure = ρsg(27.5x)+ρHgg(2x)+Patm\rho_s g (27.5 - x) + \rho_{Hg} g (2x) + P_{\text{atm}}

Equating:
ρw(25+x)=ρs(27.5x)+ρHg(2x)\rho_w (25 + x) = \rho_s (27.5 - x) + \rho_{Hg}(2x)

Substituting ρw=1\rho_w = 1, ρs=0.8\rho_s = 0.8, ρHg=13.6\rho_{Hg} = 13.6 (in g/cm³, gg cancels):
1×(25+x)=0.8×(27.5x)+13.6×(2x)1 \times (25 + x) = 0.8 \times (27.5 - x) + 13.6 \times (2x)
25+x=220.8x+27.2x25 + x = 22 - 0.8x + 27.2x
25+x=22+26.4x25 + x = 22 + 26.4x
2522=26.4xx25 - 22 = 26.4x - x
3=25.4x3 = 25.4x
x=325.40.118 cmx = \frac{3}{25.4} \approx 0.118\ \text{cm}

Difference in mercury levels:
2x=2×0.1180.236 cm2x = 2 \times 0.118 \approx 0.236\ \text{cm}

Δh=2x0.24 cm\boxed{\Delta h = 2x \approx 0.24\ \text{cm}}

The mercury level in the spirit arm is higher than in the water arm by approximately 0.24 cm.
9.11Can Bernoulli's equation be used to describe the flow of water through a rapid in a river? Explain.Show solution
Answer: No, Bernoulli's equation cannot be used to describe the flow of water through a rapid in a river.

Reason:
Bernoulli's equation is valid only under the following conditions:
1. The flow must be steady (streamlined/laminar).
2. The fluid must be non-viscous (ideal fluid).
3. The fluid must be incompressible.
4. The flow must be along a streamline.

In a river rapid, the flow is highly turbulent — the water moves in irregular, chaotic patterns with eddies and whirlpools. The flow is neither steady nor along streamlines. Also, viscous effects and energy dissipation are significant in turbulent flow.

Therefore, Bernoulli's equation, which is based on conservation of energy for steady, non-viscous, incompressible flow, cannot be applied to describe the flow of water through a rapid.
9.12Does it matter if one uses gauge instead of absolute pressures in applying Bernoulli's equation? Explain.Show solution
Answer: No, it does not matter whether one uses gauge pressure or absolute pressure in Bernoulli's equation, as long as the same reference is used consistently throughout.

Explanation:

Bernoulli's equation is:
P+12ρv2+ρgh=constantP + \frac{1}{2}\rho v^2 + \rho g h = \text{constant}

Gauge pressure is defined as: Pgauge=PabsolutePatmP_{\text{gauge}} = P_{\text{absolute}} - P_{\text{atm}}

If we substitute P=Pgauge+PatmP = P_{\text{gauge}} + P_{\text{atm}} at both points:
(Pgauge,1+Patm)+12ρv12+ρgh1=(Pgauge,2+Patm)+12ρv22+ρgh2(P_{\text{gauge},1} + P_{\text{atm}}) + \frac{1}{2}\rho v_1^2 + \rho g h_1 = (P_{\text{gauge},2} + P_{\text{atm}}) + \frac{1}{2}\rho v_2^2 + \rho g h_2

The PatmP_{\text{atm}} cancels from both sides:
Pgauge,1+12ρv12+ρgh1=Pgauge,2+12ρv22+ρgh2P_{\text{gauge},1} + \frac{1}{2}\rho v_1^2 + \rho g h_1 = P_{\text{gauge},2} + \frac{1}{2}\rho v_2^2 + \rho g h_2

Since PatmP_{\text{atm}} is a constant and appears on both sides, it cancels out. Therefore, using gauge pressures gives the same result as using absolute pressures. It does not matter, provided the same type of pressure is used at both points.
9.13Glycerine flows steadily through a horizontal tube of length 1.5 m and radius 1.0 cm. If the amount of glycerine collected per second at one end is 4.0 × 10⁻³ kg s⁻¹, what is the pressure difference between the two ends of the tube? (Density of glycerine = 1.3 × 10³ kg m⁻³ and viscosity of glycerine = 0.83 Pa s). [You may also like to check if the assumption of laminar flow in the tube is correct].Show solution
Given:
- Length of tube, l=1.5 ml = 1.5\ \text{m}
- Radius of tube, r=1.0 cm=1.0×102 mr = 1.0\ \text{cm} = 1.0 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{m}
- Mass flow rate, m˙=4.0×103 kg s1\dot{m} = 4.0 \times 10^{-3}\ \text{kg s}^{-1}
- Density of glycerine, ρ=1.3×103 kg m3\rho = 1.3 \times 10^3\ \text{kg m}^{-3}
- Viscosity of glycerine, η=0.83 Pa s\eta = 0.83\ \text{Pa s}

Step 1: Find volume flow rate QQ:
Q=m˙ρ=4.0×1031.3×103=3.077×106 m3s1Q = \frac{\dot{m}}{\rho} = \frac{4.0 \times 10^{-3}}{1.3 \times 10^3} = 3.077 \times 10^{-6}\ \text{m}^3\text{s}^{-1}

Step 2: Apply Poiseuille's formula:
Q=πr4ΔP8ηlQ = \frac{\pi r^4 \Delta P}{8 \eta l}

Solving for ΔP\Delta P:
ΔP=8ηlQπr4\Delta P = \frac{8 \eta l Q}{\pi r^4}

ΔP=8×0.83×1.5×3.077×106π×(1.0×102)4\Delta P = \frac{8 \times 0.83 \times 1.5 \times 3.077 \times 10^{-6}}{\pi \times (1.0 \times 10^{-2})^4}

ΔP=8×0.83×1.5×3.077×106π×108\Delta P = \frac{8 \times 0.83 \times 1.5 \times 3.077 \times 10^{-6}}{\pi \times 10^{-8}}

Numerator: 8×0.83×1.5×3.077×106=8×3.831×106=3.065×1058 \times 0.83 \times 1.5 \times 3.077 \times 10^{-6} = 8 \times 3.831 \times 10^{-6} = 3.065 \times 10^{-5}

Denominator: π×108=3.1416×108\pi \times 10^{-8} = 3.1416 \times 10^{-8}

ΔP=3.065×1053.1416×108975.6 Pa\Delta P = \frac{3.065 \times 10^{-5}}{3.1416 \times 10^{-8}} \approx 975.6\ \text{Pa}

ΔP9.76×102 Pa\boxed{\Delta P \approx 9.76 \times 10^2\ \text{Pa}}

Check for laminar flow (Reynolds number):

Average velocity: v=Qπr2=3.077×106π×(102)2=3.077×1063.1416×1049.8×103 m s1v = \frac{Q}{\pi r^2} = \frac{3.077 \times 10^{-6}}{\pi \times (10^{-2})^2} = \frac{3.077 \times 10^{-6}}{3.1416 \times 10^{-4}} \approx 9.8 \times 10^{-3}\ \text{m s}^{-1}

Re=ρvdη=1.3×103×9.8×103×2×1020.83Re = \frac{\rho v d}{\eta} = \frac{1.3 \times 10^3 \times 9.8 \times 10^{-3} \times 2 \times 10^{-2}}{0.83}
Re=1.3×103×9.8×103×2×1020.83=0.25480.830.3Re = \frac{1.3 \times 10^3 \times 9.8 \times 10^{-3} \times 2 \times 10^{-2}}{0.83} = \frac{0.2548}{0.83} \approx 0.3

Since Re0.32000Re \approx 0.3 \ll 2000, the flow is well within the laminar regime. The assumption is correct.
9.14In a test experiment on a model aeroplane in a wind tunnel, the flow speeds on the upper and lower surfaces of the wing are 70 m s⁻¹ and 63 m s⁻¹ respectively. What is the lift on the wing if its area is 2.5 m²? Take the density of air to be 1.3 kg m⁻³.Show solution
Given:
- Speed on upper surface, v1=70 m s1v_1 = 70\ \text{m s}^{-1}
- Speed on lower surface, v2=63 m s1v_2 = 63\ \text{m s}^{-1}
- Area of wing, A=2.5 m2A = 2.5\ \text{m}^2
- Density of air, ρ=1.3 kg m3\rho = 1.3\ \text{kg m}^{-3}

Concept: By Bernoulli's principle (at the same height for both surfaces):
P2P1=12ρ(v12v22)P_2 - P_1 = \frac{1}{2}\rho(v_1^2 - v_2^2)

where P1P_1 is pressure on upper surface and P2P_2 is pressure on lower surface.

Pressure difference:
ΔP=P2P1=12×1.3×(702632)\Delta P = P_2 - P_1 = \frac{1}{2} \times 1.3 \times (70^2 - 63^2)
=12×1.3×(49003969)= \frac{1}{2} \times 1.3 \times (4900 - 3969)
=12×1.3×931= \frac{1}{2} \times 1.3 \times 931
=0.65×931=605.15 Pa= 0.65 \times 931 = 605.15\ \text{Pa}

Lift force:
F=ΔP×A=605.15×2.5F = \Delta P \times A = 605.15 \times 2.5
F1512.9 N1.51×103 N\boxed{F \approx 1512.9\ \text{N} \approx 1.51 \times 10^3\ \text{N}}

The lift on the wing is approximately 1513 N.
9.15Figures 9.20(a) and (b) refer to the steady flow of a (non-viscous) liquid. Which of the two figures is incorrect? Why?Show solution
Answer: Figure (a) is incorrect.

Reasoning:

In steady flow of a non-viscous, incompressible liquid, the equation of continuity states:
Av=constantAv = \text{constant}

At a constriction (narrower cross-section), the velocity of flow increases.

By Bernoulli's principle:
P+12ρv2+ρgh=constantP + \frac{1}{2}\rho v^2 + \rho g h = \text{constant}

At the same height, if velocity increases, pressure must decrease.

In figure (a): The streamlines at the constriction are shown wider apart (suggesting lower velocity) and the pressure gauge shows higher pressure at the constriction. This contradicts both the continuity equation (velocity should be higher at constriction) and Bernoulli's principle (pressure should be lower where velocity is higher).

In figure (b): The streamlines are closer together at the constriction (indicating higher velocity) and the pressure is lower there — consistent with Bernoulli's principle.

Therefore, figure (a) is incorrect because it shows increased pressure at the constriction, whereas the pressure should decrease at the constriction where flow speed increases.
9.16The cylindrical tube of a spray pump has a cross-section of 8.0 cm² one end of which has 40 fine holes each of diameter 1.0 mm. If the liquid flow inside the tube is 1.5 m min⁻¹, what is the speed of ejection of the liquid through the holes?Show solution
Given:
- Cross-sectional area of tube, A1=8.0 cm2=8.0×104 m2A_1 = 8.0\ \text{cm}^2 = 8.0 \times 10^{-4}\ \text{m}^2
- Number of holes, n=40n = 40
- Diameter of each hole, d=1.0 mm=1.0×103 md = 1.0\ \text{mm} = 1.0 \times 10^{-3}\ \text{m}
- Radius of each hole, r=0.5×103 mr = 0.5 \times 10^{-3}\ \text{m}
- Speed of liquid in tube, v1=1.5 m min1=1.560 m s1=0.025 m s1v_1 = 1.5\ \text{m min}^{-1} = \frac{1.5}{60}\ \text{m s}^{-1} = 0.025\ \text{m s}^{-1}

Area of each hole:
a=πr2=π×(0.5×103)2=π×0.25×106 m2a = \pi r^2 = \pi \times (0.5 \times 10^{-3})^2 = \pi \times 0.25 \times 10^{-6}\ \text{m}^2
a=7.854×107 m2a = 7.854 \times 10^{-7}\ \text{m}^2

Total area of all 40 holes:
A2=40×a=40×7.854×107=3.1416×105 m2A_2 = 40 \times a = 40 \times 7.854 \times 10^{-7} = 3.1416 \times 10^{-5}\ \text{m}^2

By equation of continuity:
A1v1=A2v2A_1 v_1 = A_2 v_2
v2=A1v1A2=8.0×104×0.0253.1416×105v_2 = \frac{A_1 v_1}{A_2} = \frac{8.0 \times 10^{-4} \times 0.025}{3.1416 \times 10^{-5}}
v2=2.0×1053.1416×105v_2 = \frac{2.0 \times 10^{-5}}{3.1416 \times 10^{-5}}
v20.637 m s1\boxed{v_2 \approx 0.637\ \text{m s}^{-1}}

The speed of ejection of liquid through the holes is approximately 0.64 m s⁻¹.
9.17A U-shaped wire is dipped in a soap solution, and removed. The thin soap film formed between the wire and the light slider supports a weight of 1.5 × 10⁻² N (which includes the small weight of the slider). The length of the slider is 30 cm. What is the surface tension of the film?Show solution
Given:
- Weight supported by the film, W=1.5×102 NW = 1.5 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{N}
- Length of slider, l=30 cm=0.30 ml = 30\ \text{cm} = 0.30\ \text{m}

Concept: A soap film has two surfaces. The surface tension force acts along both surfaces of the film.

Total length of contact = 2l2l (two surfaces)

Force due to surface tension:
F=S×2lF = S \times 2l

At equilibrium, this force balances the weight:
S×2l=WS \times 2l = W

Solving for surface tension SS:
S=W2l=1.5×1022×0.30S = \frac{W}{2l} = \frac{1.5 \times 10^{-2}}{2 \times 0.30}
S=1.5×1020.60S = \frac{1.5 \times 10^{-2}}{0.60}
S=2.5×102 N m1\boxed{S = 2.5 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{N m}^{-1}}

The surface tension of the soap film is 2.5×1022.5 \times 10^{-2} N m⁻¹.
9.18Figure 9.21 (a) shows a thin liquid film supporting a small weight = 4.5 × 10⁻² N. What is the weight supported by a film of the same liquid at the same temperature in Fig. (b) and (c)? Explain your answer physically.Show solution
Given:
- Weight supported by film in figure (a), Wa=4.5×102 NW_a = 4.5 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{N}
- Same liquid, same temperature in figures (b) and (c).

Key Concept: Surface tension SS is a property of the liquid at a given temperature and is independent of the area or shape of the surface. The surface tension (force per unit length) remains the same.

The weight supported by the film depends on the surface tension and the length of contact:
W=S×2lW = S \times 2l

Since the same liquid is used at the same temperature, SS is the same. If the length of the slider/contact line ll is the same in all three figures (which is the case as shown in the figures — all have the same length of contact), then:

Wb=Wc=Wa=4.5×102 NW_b = W_c = W_a = 4.5 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{N}

Physical Explanation:
Surface tension is an intrinsic property of the liquid surface — it does not depend on the area of the film or its shape. The restoring force due to surface tension depends only on the length of the contact line (perimeter) and the surface tension coefficient. Since the contact length is the same in all three cases and the liquid and temperature are identical, the surface tension force (and hence the weight supported) is the same in all three figures.

Wb=Wc=4.5×102 N\boxed{W_b = W_c = 4.5 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{N}}
9.19What is the pressure inside the drop of mercury of radius 3.00 mm at room temperature? Surface tension of mercury at that temperature (20°C) is 4.65 × 10⁻¹ N m⁻¹. The atmospheric pressure is 1.01 × 10⁵ Pa. Also give the excess pressure inside the drop.Show solution
Given:
- Radius of mercury drop, r=3.00 mm=3.00×103 mr = 3.00\ \text{mm} = 3.00 \times 10^{-3}\ \text{m}
- Surface tension of mercury, S=4.65×101 N m1S = 4.65 \times 10^{-1}\ \text{N m}^{-1}
- Atmospheric pressure, P0=1.01×105 PaP_0 = 1.01 \times 10^5\ \text{Pa}

Excess pressure inside a liquid drop:

For a liquid drop (one surface), the excess pressure is:
ΔP=2Sr\Delta P = \frac{2S}{r}

ΔP=2×4.65×1013.00×103\Delta P = \frac{2 \times 4.65 \times 10^{-1}}{3.00 \times 10^{-3}}
ΔP=9.30×1013.00×103\Delta P = \frac{9.30 \times 10^{-1}}{3.00 \times 10^{-3}}
ΔP=310 Pa\boxed{\Delta P = 310\ \text{Pa}}

Total pressure inside the drop:
Pinside=P0+ΔP=1.01×105+310P_{\text{inside}} = P_0 + \Delta P = 1.01 \times 10^5 + 310
Pinside=1.01×105+0.00310×105P_{\text{inside}} = 1.01 \times 10^5 + 0.00310 \times 10^5
Pinside1.0131×105 Pa\boxed{P_{\text{inside}} \approx 1.0131 \times 10^5\ \text{Pa}}

Summary:
- Excess pressure inside the drop = 310 Pa
- Total pressure inside the drop ≈ 1.0131 × 10⁵ Pa
9.20What is the excess pressure inside a bubble of soap solution of radius 5.00 mm, given that the surface tension of soap solution at the temperature (20°C) is 2.50 × 10⁻² N m⁻¹? If an air bubble of the same dimension were formed at depth of 40.0 cm inside a container containing the soap solution (of relative density 1.20), what would be the pressure inside the bubble? (1 atmospheric pressure is 1.01 × 10⁵ Pa).Show solution
Given:
- Radius of bubble, r=5.00 mm=5.00×103 mr = 5.00\ \text{mm} = 5.00 \times 10^{-3}\ \text{m}
- Surface tension of soap solution, S=2.50×102 N m1S = 2.50 \times 10^{-2}\ \text{N m}^{-1}
- Depth of air bubble, h=40.0 cm=0.40 mh = 40.0\ \text{cm} = 0.40\ \text{m}
- Relative density of soap solution = 1.20, so ρ=1.20×103 kg m3\rho = 1.20 \times 10^3\ \text{kg m}^{-3}
- Atmospheric pressure, P0=1.01×105 PaP_0 = 1.01 \times 10^5\ \text{Pa}
- g=9.8 m s2g = 9.8\ \text{m s}^{-2}

---

Part 1: Excess pressure inside a soap bubble:

A soap bubble has two liquid surfaces (inner and outer), so:
ΔP=4Sr=4×2.50×1025.00×103\Delta P = \frac{4S}{r} = \frac{4 \times 2.50 \times 10^{-2}}{5.00 \times 10^{-3}}
ΔP=1015.00×103=20 Pa\Delta P = \frac{10^{-1}}{5.00 \times 10^{-3}} = 20\ \text{Pa}

ΔPsoap bubble=20 Pa\boxed{\Delta P_{\text{soap bubble}} = 20\ \text{Pa}}

---

Part 2: Pressure inside an air bubble at depth 40 cm in soap solution:

An air bubble in a liquid has only one surface, so:
ΔPair bubble=2Sr=2×2.50×1025.00×103=5.00×1025.00×103=10 Pa\Delta P_{\text{air bubble}} = \frac{2S}{r} = \frac{2 \times 2.50 \times 10^{-2}}{5.00 \times 10^{-3}} = \frac{5.00 \times 10^{-2}}{5.00 \times 10^{-3}} = 10\ \text{Pa}

Pressure outside the air bubble (at depth h=0.40h = 0.40 m):
Poutside=P0+ρghP_{\text{outside}} = P_0 + \rho g h
=1.01×105+1.20×103×9.8×0.40= 1.01 \times 10^5 + 1.20 \times 10^3 \times 9.8 \times 0.40
=1.01×105+4704= 1.01 \times 10^5 + 4704
=1.01×105+0.04704×104= 1.01 \times 10^5 + 0.04704 \times 10^4
=1.01×105+4.704×103= 1.01 \times 10^5 + 4.704 \times 10^3
1.0571×105 Pa\approx 1.0571 \times 10^5\ \text{Pa}

Pressure inside the air bubble:
Pinside=Poutside+ΔP=1.0571×105+10P_{\text{inside}} = P_{\text{outside}} + \Delta P = 1.0571 \times 10^5 + 10
Pinside1.06×105 Pa\boxed{P_{\text{inside}} \approx 1.06 \times 10^5\ \text{Pa}}

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