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Shown here is a cool picture of water being released at 300,000 gallons per second in the spring of 2008. This was part of a revitalization effort for the ecosystem of the Grand Canyon and the Colorado River. Estimate the Reynolds number of the pipe flow. Is it laminar or turbulent? (Hint For a length scale, approximate the height of the man in the blue shirt directly above time pipe to be 6 ft.)
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- Two reservoirs are connected by a vertical pipe as in Figure 1 below. The distance between both surface levels is 6 m. The fluid is ethyl alcohol at 20 degrees centigrade (density=789 kg/m³, dynamic viscosity=0.0012 kg/m/s), and the tanks are very wide. Please determine the limiting pipe diameter for which the flow abandons the laminar regime and becomes turbulent flow. 6 m 4.5 marrow_forwardQuestion 8 download image D The water in a large tank exits through a horizontal circular pipe of diameter D=0.01m and length L=94m. The centre of the exit of the pipe is h=1.0m below the water surface. We can assume that the flow entrance to the pipe is smooth so that there are no minor losses. The flow in the pipe is laminar, the friction factor can be assumed constant and can be found from h fD=64/Rep where the Reynolds number is based on the pipe diameter and mean flow speed in the pipe. Taking frictional losses into account, solve the resulting quadratic equation to calculate the speed of the flow out of the pipe. Give your answer in m/s to 2 decimal places. Use: kinematic viscosity given by v=0.00000114 m²/s density of water given by 1000 kg/m3 acceleration due to gravity of 9.81 m/s² A Moving to another question will save this response. >>arrow_forwardanswer (a) and (b)arrow_forward
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