University Physics Volume 1
18th Edition
ISBN: 9781938168277
Author: William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher: OpenStax - Rice University
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 14, Problem 51P
A glass tube mercury. What would be the height of the column of mercury which would create pressure equal to 1.00 atm?
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 14 Solutions
University Physics Volume 1
Ch. 14 - Check Your Understanding If the reservoir in...Ch. 14 - Check Your Understanding Mercury is a hazardous...Ch. 14 - Check Your Understanding Would a hydraulic press...Ch. 14 - Which of the following substances are fluids at...Ch. 14 - Why are gases easier to compress tan liquids and...Ch. 14 - Explain how the density of air varies with...Ch. 14 - The images show a glass of ice water filled to the...Ch. 14 - How is pressure related to sharpness of a knife...Ch. 14 - Why is a force exerted by a static fluid on a...Ch. 14 - Imagine a remote location near the Nott Pole, a...
Ch. 14 - In ballet, dancing en pointe (on the tips of the...Ch. 14 - Atmospheric pressure exerts a large force (equal...Ch. 14 - Why does atmospheric pressure decrease more...Ch. 14 - The image shows how sandbags placed around a leak...Ch. 14 - Is there a net force on a dam due to atmospheric...Ch. 14 - Does atmospheric pressure add to the gas pressure...Ch. 14 - You can break a strong wine bottle by pounding a...Ch. 14 - Explain why the fluid reaches equal levels on...Ch. 14 - Suppose the master cylinder in a hydraulic system...Ch. 14 - More force is required to pull the plug in a full...Ch. 14 - Do fluids exert buoyant forces in a “weightless"...Ch. 14 - Will the same ship float higher in salt water than...Ch. 14 - Marbles dropped into a partially filled bathtub...Ch. 14 - Mary figures in the show streamlines. Explain why...Ch. 14 - You can squirt water from a garden hose a...Ch. 14 - Water is shot nearly vertically upward in a...Ch. 14 - Look back to figure 14.29. Answer the following...Ch. 14 - A tube with a narrow segment designed to enhance...Ch. 14 - Some chimney pipes have a T-shape, with a...Ch. 14 - Is there a limit to the height to which an...Ch. 14 - Why is it preferable for airplanes to take off...Ch. 14 - Roofs are sometimes pushed off vertically a...Ch. 14 - It is dangerous to stud close to railroad tracks...Ch. 14 - Water pressure inside a hose nozzle can be less...Ch. 14 - David rolled down the window on his car while...Ch. 14 - Based on Bernoulli’s equation, what are three...Ch. 14 - The old rubber boot below has leaks. To what...Ch. 14 - Water pressure inside a hose nozzle can be less...Ch. 14 - Explain why the viscosity of a liquid decreases...Ch. 14 - When paddling a canoe upstream, it is wisest to...Ch. 14 - Plumbing usually includes air-filled tubes tear...Ch. 14 - Doppler ultrasound can be used to measure the...Ch. 14 - Sink drains often have a device such as that shown...Ch. 14 - Gold is sold by the troy ounce (31.103 g). What is...Ch. 14 - Mercury is commonly supplied in flasks containing...Ch. 14 - What is the mass deep breath of air having a...Ch. 14 - A straightforward method of finding the density of...Ch. 14 - Suppose you have a coffee with a circular...Ch. 14 - A rectangular gasoline tank bold 30.0 kg of...Ch. 14 - A trash compactor can compress its contents to...Ch. 14 - A 2.50-kg steel gasoline can holds 20.0 L of...Ch. 14 - What is the density of 18.0-karat gold that is a...Ch. 14 - The tip of a nail exerts tremendous pressure when...Ch. 14 - A glass tube mercury. What would be the height of...Ch. 14 - The greatest ocean depths on Earth are found in...Ch. 14 - Verigy that the SI of hpg is N/m2.Ch. 14 - What pressure is exerted the bottom of a gas tank...Ch. 14 - A dam is used to hold back a river. The dam has a...Ch. 14 - Find ae gauge and absolute pressures in be balloon...Ch. 14 - How tall must be to measure blood pressure as high...Ch. 14 - Assuming bicycle tires are perfectly flexible and...Ch. 14 - Pascal’s Principle and Hydraulics 59. How much...Ch. 14 - What force must exerted on the master cylinder of...Ch. 14 - A host pours the remnants of several of wine into...Ch. 14 - A certain hydraulic system is designed to exert a...Ch. 14 - Verify that work input equals work output for a...Ch. 14 - What fraction of ice is submerged when it floats...Ch. 14 - If a person's body has a density of 995 kg/m3,...Ch. 14 - A rock with a mass of 540 g in air is found to...Ch. 14 - Archimedes' principle can be used to calculate the...Ch. 14 - Calculate the buoyant force a 200-L helium...Ch. 14 - What is density of a woman floats in fresh water...Ch. 14 - A man has a mass of 80 kg and a density of...Ch. 14 - A simple compass cute made by placing a small bar...Ch. 14 - What percentage of an iron anchor’s weight will be...Ch. 14 - Referring to Figure 14.20, prove that the buoyant...Ch. 14 - A 75.0-kg floats in freshwater 3.00% of his volume...Ch. 14 - What is the average flow rate in cm3/s of gasoline...Ch. 14 - The heart of a resting adult pumps blood at a rate...Ch. 14 - The Huka Falls on the Waikato River is one of New...Ch. 14 - (a) Estimate the time it would take to a private...Ch. 14 - What is the fluid speed a hose a 9.00-cm diameter...Ch. 14 - Water is moving at a velocity of 2.00 m/s through...Ch. 14 - Prove the sped of an incompressible fluid through...Ch. 14 - Water emerges straight down from a faucet with a...Ch. 14 - Verify that pressure has units of enery per unit...Ch. 14 - Suppose you have a wind speed gauge like the pitot...Ch. 14 - If be pressure reading of your pitot tube is 15.0...Ch. 14 - Every few years, winds in Boulder, Colorado,...Ch. 14 - What is the pressure drop due to the Bernoulli...Ch. 14 - (a) Using Bernoulli's equation, show that be...Ch. 14 - A container of water has a cross-sectional area of...Ch. 14 - A fluid of a constant density flows through a...Ch. 14 - (a) Calculate the retarding force due to viscosity...Ch. 14 - The arterioles (small arteries) leading to organ...Ch. 14 - A spherical particle falling at a terminal speed...Ch. 14 - Using the equation of the previous problem, find...Ch. 14 - A skydiver will reach a terminal velocity when the...Ch. 14 - (a) Verify that a 19.0% decrease in laminar flow...Ch. 14 - When physicians diagnose arterial blockages, they...Ch. 14 - An oil gusher shoots crude 25.0 m the through a...Ch. 14 - Concrete is pumped from a cement mixer to the...Ch. 14 - Verify that flow of oil is laminar for an oil...Ch. 14 - Calculate Reynolds numbers for flow of trough (a)...Ch. 14 - A fire hose has an inside diameter of 6.40 cm....Ch. 14 - At what rate might turbulence begin to develop in...Ch. 14 - Before digital storage devices, such as the memory...Ch. 14 - Water towers store water above the level of...Ch. 14 - The aqueous humor in a person's eye is exerting a...Ch. 14 - (a) Convert normal blood pressure readings of 120...Ch. 14 - Pressure cookers have been around for more than...Ch. 14 - Bird bones have air pockets to reduce their...Ch. 14 - In an immersion measurement of a woman's density,...Ch. 14 - Some have a density slightly less than that of...Ch. 14 - The human circulation system has approximately...Ch. 14 - The flow of blood through a 2.00106 m -radius...Ch. 14 - The left ventricle of a resting adult's heart...Ch. 14 - A sump pump (used to drain water from be basement...Ch. 14 - A glucose solution being administered with an IV...Ch. 14 - A small artery has a length of 1.1103m and a...Ch. 14 - Angioplasty is a technique in which arteries...Ch. 14 - Suppose a blood vessel's radius is decreased to...Ch. 14 - The pressure dam early in problems section...Ch. 14 - The temperature of atmosphere is not always...Ch. 14 - A submarine is stranded on the bottom of the ocean...Ch. 14 - Logs sometimes float vertically a lake because one...Ch. 14 - Scurrilous con artists have been known to...Ch. 14 - The inside volume of a house is equivalent to that...Ch. 14 - A garden hose with a diameter of 2.0 cm is used to...Ch. 14 - A frequency quoted rule of thumb aircraft design...Ch. 14 - Two pipes of equal and constant diameter leave a...Ch. 14 - Fluid originally flows through a tube at a rate of...Ch. 14 - During a marathon race, a runner's blood flow...Ch. 14 - Water supplied to a house by a water main has a...Ch. 14 - Gasoline is piped underground from refineries to...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
66. Astronauts use a centrifuge to simulate the acceleration of a rocket launch. The centrifuge takes 30 s to...
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
A friend says, “It makes no sense that Anna could turn on lights in her hands simultaneously in her frame but t...
Modern Physics
Fill in each blank with the most reasonable metric unit (km, m, cm, or mm).
22. The length of a football field ...
Applied Physics (11th Edition)
3. What is free-fall, and why does it make you weightless? Briefly describe why astronauts are weightless in th...
The Cosmic Perspective
16. * You push a disk-shaped platform tangentially on its edge 2.0 m from the axle. The platform starts at res...
College Physics
Which value, apparent magnitude, or absolute magnitude, do you think:
tells us how bright an object will appear...
Lecture- Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- A 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_forwardLiquid toxic waste with a density of 1752 kg/m3 is flowing through a section of pipe with a radius of 0.312 m at a velocity of 1.64 m/s. a. What is the velocity of the waste after it goes through a constriction and enters a second section of pipe with a radius of 0.222 m? b. If the waste is under a pressure of 850,000 Pa in the first section of pipe, what is the pressure in the second (constricted) section of pipe?arrow_forwardWater is moving at a velocity of 2.00 m/s through a hose with an internal diameter of 1.60 cm. (a) What is the flow rate in liters per second? (b) The fluid velocity in this hose's nozzle is 15.0 m/s. What is the nozzle's inside diameter?arrow_forward
- A table-tennis ball has a diameter of 3.80 cm and average density of 0.084 0 g/cm3. What force is required to hold it completely submerged under water?arrow_forwardA hollow copper (Cu = 8.92 103 kg/m3) spherical shell of mass m = 0.950 kg floats on water with its entire volume below the surface. a. What is the radius of the sphere? b. What is the thickness of the shell wall?arrow_forward. A juniper-wood plank measuring 0.25 ft by 1 ft by 16 ft is totally submerged in water, (a) What is its weight? (b) What is the buoyant force acting on it? (c) What is the size and the direction of the net force on it?arrow_forward
- (a) What is the pressure drop due to the Bernoulli effect as water goes into a 3.00-cm-diameter nozzle from a 9.00-cm-diameter fire hose while carrying a flow of 40.0 L/S? (b) To what maximum height above the nozzle can this water rise? (The actual height will be significantly smaller due to air resistance.)arrow_forwardHow tall must a water-filled manometer be to measure blood pressures as high as 300 mm Hg?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_forward
- Pressure in the spinal fluid is measured as shown in Figure 11.43. If the pressure in the spinal fluid is 10.0 mm Hg: (a) What is the reading of the water manometer in cm water? (b) What is the reading if the person sits up, placing the top of the fluid 60 cm above the tap? The fluid density is 1.05 g/mL. Figure 11.43 A water manometer used to measure pressure in the spinal fluid. The height of the fluid in the manometer is measured relative to the spinal column, and the manometer is open to the atmosphere. The measured pressure will be considerably greater if the person sits up.arrow_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(a) What is the density of a woman who floats in freshwater with 4.00% of her volume above the surface? This could be measured by placing her in a tank with marks on the side to measure how much water she displaces when floating and when held under water (briefly). (b) What percent of her volume is above the surface when she floats in seawater?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781938168000Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger HinrichsPublisher:OpenStax CollegePrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage Learning
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781938168000
Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger Hinrichs
Publisher:OpenStax College
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Fluids in Motion: Crash Course Physics #15; Author: Crash Course;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJefjG3xhW0;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY