
Fluid Mechanics
8th Edition
ISBN: 9780073398273
Author: Frank M. White
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 1, Problem 1.78P
To determine
i.
The air temperature of sound speed by timing the difference between seeing a cannon’s puff of smoke and hearing its boom having time difference of
To determine
ii.
The air temperature of sound having temperature difference of
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Chapter 1 Solutions
Fluid Mechanics
Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.1PCh. 1 - Table A.6 lists the density of the standard...Ch. 1 - For the triangular element in Fig, P1.3,show that...Ch. 1 - Sand, and other granular materials, appear to...Ch. 1 - The mean free path of a gas, l, is defined as the...Ch. 1 - Henri Darcy, a French engineer, proposed that the...Ch. 1 - Convert the following inappropriate quantities...Ch. 1 - Suppose we know little about the strength of...Ch. 1 - A hemispherical container, 26 inches in diameter,...Ch. 1 - The Stokes-Oseen formula [33] for drag force F on...
Ch. 1 - P1.11 In English Engineering units, the specific...Ch. 1 - For low-speed (laminar) steady flow through a...Ch. 1 - The efficiency ? of a pump is defined as the...Ch. 1 - Figure P1.14 shows the flow of water over a dam....Ch. 1 - The height H that fluid rises in a liquid...Ch. 1 - Algebraic equations such as Bernoulli's relation,...Ch. 1 - The Hazen-Williams hydraulics formula for volume...Ch. 1 - For small particles at low velocities, the first...Ch. 1 - In his study of the circular hydraulic jump formed...Ch. 1 - Books on porous media and atomization claim that...Ch. 1 - Aeronautical engineers measure the pitching moment...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.22PCh. 1 - During World War II, Sir Geoffrey Taylor, a...Ch. 1 - Air, assumed to be an ideal gas with k = 1.40,...Ch. 1 - On a summer day in Narragansett, Rhode Island, the...Ch. 1 - When we in the United States say a car's tire is...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.27PCh. 1 - Wet atmospheric air at 100 percent relative...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.29PCh. 1 - P1.30 Repeat Prob. 1.29 if the tank is filled with...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.31PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.32PCh. 1 - A tank contai as 9 kg of CO2at 20°C and 2.0 MPa....Ch. 1 - Consider steam at the following state near the...Ch. 1 - In Table A.4, most common gases (air, nitrogen,...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.36PCh. 1 - A near-ideal gas has a molecular weight of 44 and...Ch. 1 - In Fig. 1.7, if the fluid is glycerin at 20°C and...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.39PCh. 1 - Glycerin at 20°C fills the space between a hollow...Ch. 1 - An aluminum cylinder weighing 30 N, 6 cm in...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.42PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.43PCh. 1 - One type of viscometer is simply a long capillary...Ch. 1 - A block of weight W slides down an inclined plane...Ch. 1 - A simple and popular model for two nonnewtonian...Ch. 1 - Data for the apparent viscosity of average human...Ch. 1 - A thin plate is separated from two fixed plates by...Ch. 1 - An amazing number of commercial and laboratory...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.50PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.51PCh. 1 - The belt in Fig. P1.52 moves at a steady velocity...Ch. 1 - A solid tune of angle 2 , base r0, and density...Ch. 1 - A disk of radius R rotates at an angular velocity ...Ch. 1 - A block of weight W is being pulled over a table...Ch. 1 - The device in Fig. P1.56 is called a cone-plate...Ch. 1 - Extend the steady flow between a fixed lower plate...Ch. 1 - The laminar pipe flow example of Prob. 1.12 can be...Ch. 1 - A solid cylinder of diameter D, length L, and...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.60PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.61PCh. 1 - P1.62 The hydrogen bubbles that produced the...Ch. 1 - Derive Eq. (1.33) by making a force balance on the...Ch. 1 - Pressure in a water container can be measured by...Ch. 1 - The system in Fig. P1.65 is used to calculate the...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.66PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.67PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.68PCh. 1 - A solid cylindrical needle of diameter d, length...Ch. 1 - Derive an expression for the capillary height...Ch. 1 - A soap bubble of diameter D1coalesces with another...Ch. 1 - Early mountaineers boiled water to estimate their...Ch. 1 - A small submersible moves al velocity V, in fresh...Ch. 1 - Oil, with a vapor pressure of 20 kPa, is delivered...Ch. 1 - An airplane flies at 555 mi/h. At what altitude in...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.76PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.77PCh. 1 - P1.78 Sir Isaac Newton measured the speed of sound...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.79PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.80PCh. 1 - Use Eq. (1.39) to find and sketch the streamlines...Ch. 1 - P1.82 A velocity field is given by u = V cos, v =...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.83PCh. 1 - In the early 1900s, the British chemist Sir Cyril...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.85PCh. 1 - A right circular cylinder volume v is to be...Ch. 1 - The absolute viscosity of a fluid is primarily a...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.2FEEPCh. 1 - Helium has a molecular weight of 4.003. What is...Ch. 1 - An oil has a kinematic viscosity of 1.25 E-4 m2/s...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.5FEEPCh. 1 - Prob. 1.6FEEPCh. 1 - FE1.7 Two parallel plates, one moving at 4 m/s...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.8FEEPCh. 1 - A certain water flow at 20°C has a critical...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.10FEEPCh. 1 - Sometimes we can develop equations and solve...Ch. 1 - When a person ice skates, the surface of the ice...Ch. 1 - Two thin flat plates, tilted at an angle a, are...Ch. 1 - Oil of viscosity and density drains steadily...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.5CPCh. 1 - Prob. 1.6CPCh. 1 - Prob. 1.7CPCh. 1 -
C1.8 A mechanical device that uses the rotating...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.9CPCh. 1 - A popular gravity-driven instrument is the...Ch. 1 - Mott [Ref. 49, p. 38] discusses a simple...Ch. 1 - A solid aluminum disk (SG = 2.7) is 2 in in...
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- The evaporator of a vapor compression refrigeration cycle utilizing R-123 as the refrigerant isbeing used to chill water. The evaporator is a shell and tube heat exchanger with the water flowingthrough the tubes. The water enters the heat exchanger at a temperature of 54°F. The approachtemperature difference of the evaporator is 3°R. The evaporating pressure of the refrigeration cycleis 4.8 psia and the condensing pressure is 75 psia. The refrigerant is flowing through the cycle witha flow rate of 18,000 lbm/hr. The R-123 leaves the evaporator as a saturated vapor and leaves thecondenser as a saturated liquid. Determine the following:a. The outlet temperature of the chilled waterb. The volumetric flow rate of the chilled water (gpm)c. The UA product of the evaporator (Btu/h-°F)d. The heat transfer rate between the refrigerant and the water (tons)arrow_forward(Read image) (Answer given)arrow_forwardProblem (17): water flowing in an open channel of a rectangular cross-section with width (b) transitions from a mild slope to a steep slope (i.e., from subcritical to supercritical flow) with normal water depths of (y₁) and (y2), respectively. Given the values of y₁ [m], y₂ [m], and b [m], calculate the discharge in the channel (Q) in [Lit/s]. Givens: y1 = 4.112 m y2 = 0.387 m b = 0.942 m Answers: ( 1 ) 1880.186 lit/s ( 2 ) 4042.945 lit/s ( 3 ) 2553.11 lit/s ( 4 ) 3130.448 lit/sarrow_forward
- Problem (14): A pump is being used to lift water from an underground tank through a pipe of diameter (d) at discharge (Q). The total head loss until the pump entrance can be calculated as (h₁ = K[V²/2g]), h where (V) is the flow velocity in the pipe. The elevation difference between the pump and tank surface is (h). Given the values of h [cm], d [cm], and K [-], calculate the maximum discharge Q [Lit/s] beyond which cavitation would take place at the pump entrance. Assume Turbulent flow conditions. Givens: h = 120.31 cm d = 14.455 cm K = 8.976 Q Answers: (1) 94.917 lit/s (2) 49.048 lit/s ( 3 ) 80.722 lit/s 68.588 lit/s 4arrow_forwardProblem (13): A pump is being used to lift water from the bottom tank to the top tank in a galvanized iron pipe at a discharge (Q). The length and diameter of the pipe section from the bottom tank to the pump are (L₁) and (d₁), respectively. The length and diameter of the pipe section from the pump to the top tank are (L2) and (d2), respectively. Given the values of Q [L/s], L₁ [m], d₁ [m], L₂ [m], d₂ [m], calculate total head loss due to friction (i.e., major loss) in the pipe (hmajor-loss) in [cm]. Givens: L₁,d₁ Pump L₂,d2 오 0.533 lit/s L1 = 6920.729 m d1 = 1.065 m L2 = 70.946 m d2 0.072 m Answers: (1) 3.069 cm (2) 3.914 cm ( 3 ) 2.519 cm ( 4 ) 1.855 cm TABLE 8.1 Equivalent Roughness for New Pipes Pipe Riveted steel Concrete Wood stave Cast iron Galvanized iron Equivalent Roughness, & Feet Millimeters 0.003-0.03 0.9-9.0 0.001-0.01 0.3-3.0 0.0006-0.003 0.18-0.9 0.00085 0.26 0.0005 0.15 0.045 0.000005 0.0015 0.0 (smooth) 0.0 (smooth) Commercial steel or wrought iron 0.00015 Drawn…arrow_forwardThe flow rate is 12.275 Liters/s and the diameter is 6.266 cm.arrow_forward
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Properties of Fluids: The Basics; Author: Swanson Flo;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgD3nEO1iCA;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Fluid Mechanics-Lecture-1_Introduction & Basic Concepts; Author: OOkul - UPSC & SSC Exams;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bZodDnmE0o;License: Standard Youtube License