Chapter 3.2
Chapter 3.2
Chapter 3.2
The first integral in the above equation the first moment of the
area and the second integral is the second moment of area
about the ox axis, Ixx
Finally for x’
16
Defining Product of Inertia
17
axis
Finding Product of Inertia
18
The centroid and the centroidal moments of inertia for
some common geometries
19
Hydrostatic Force: Vertical Wall
Find the Pressure on a Vertical Wall using Hydrostatic Force Method
Pressure varies linearly with depth by the hydrostatic equation:
The magnitude of pressure at the bottom is p = gh
yR = 2/3h
Where Pc is the gauge pressure in the liquid at
the location of the centroid of the area A, which
occurs at h/2, then
The pressure prism is a second way of analyzing the forces on a vertical wall.
21
Pressure Prism: Vertical Wall
O Volume
FR
1
ghbh
2
FR
1
gh A
2
Location of the Resultant Force, CP:
The location is at the centroid of the volume of the
pressure prism.
Center of Pressure:
b 2h
,
2 3
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Hydrostatic Forces on Curved Surfaces
Note that the forces F1, F2, F3, and F4 are simply the forces exerted on the plane surfaces of
the parallelepiped. For simplicity the forces in the x direction are not shown,
W is the weight of the shaded fluid volume (parallelepiped minus body), and FB is the force
the body is exerting on the fluid.
The forces on the vertical surfaces, such as F3 and F4 are all equal and cancel, so the equilibrium
equation of interest is in the z direction and can be expressed as
where γ is the specific weight of the fluid and is the volume of the body.
Buoyancy and Stability
27
The direction of the buoyant force, which is the force of the fluid on the
body, is opposite to that shown on the free body diagram.
Example 1:
A geologist finds that a Moon rock whose mass is 9.28 kg has an
apparent mass of 6.18 kg when submerged in water. What is the
density of the rock?
solution:
The difference in the actual mass and the apparent mass is the mass
of the water displaced by the rock. The mass of the water displaced is
the volume of the rock times the density of water, and the volume of
the rock is the mass of the rock divided by its density. Combining these
relationships yields an expression for the density of the rock.
mrock
mactual mapparent m r waterVrock r water
r rock
9.28 kg 6.18 kg
mrock 9.28 kg
r rock r water 1.00 103 kg m3 2.99 103 kg m 3
m
Buoyancy and Stability
Example 2.
A crane lifts the 18,000-kg steel hull of a ship out of the
water. Determine (a) the tension in the crane’s cable when the
hull is submerged in the water, and (b) the tension when the hull
is completely out of the water.
Solution:
a. When the hull is submerged, both the buoyant force and the
tension force act upward on the hull, and so their sum is equal
to the weight of the hull. The buoyant force is the weight of
the water displaced.
Buoyancy and Stability
T Fbuoyant mg
mhull r water
T mg Fbuoyant mhull g r waterVsub g mhull g r water g mhull g 1
r hull r hull
3 3
1.8 10 4 kg 9.80 m s 2 1
1.00 10 kg m
3
1.538 10 5
N 1.5 10 5
N
7.8 10 kg m
3
a. When the hull is completely out of the water, the tension in the crane’s
cable must be equal to the weight of the hull.
T mg 1.8 104 kg 9.80 m s 2 1.764 105 N 1.8 105 N
Buoyancy and Stability
34
Example :3
A 5.25-kg piece of wood floats on water. What minimum mass of lead,
hung from the wood by a string, will cause it to sink? SG 0.50
Solution:
For the combination to just barely sink, the total weight of the wood and
lead must be equal to the total buoyant force on the wood and the lead.
r water 1 1 1
r 1 SG 1
wood m wood 5.25 kg 0.50 5.76 kg
mPb mwood
r water 1 1 1
wood
1 r
SG
1
Pb Pb
11.3
Rigid-Body Motion
35
There are special cases where a body of fluid can undergo rigid-body
motion: Linear acceleration, and rotation of a cylindrical container.
Estimating the pressure between two closely spaced points apart some dy, dz:
36
Pressure Variation, Rigid Body Motion: Linear Motion
Now consider the case where ay = 0, and az ≠ 0:
p
Recall, already: 0
x
Then, p
0
y
p
r g az
z
So, Non-Hydrostatic
Pressure will vary linearly with depth, but variation is the combination of gravity and
externally developed acceleration.
A tank of water moving upward in an elevator will have slightly greater pressure at the
bottom.
If a liquid is in free-fall az = -g, and all pressure gradients are zero—surface tension is all
37 that keeps the splash together.
Pressure Variation, Rigid Body Motion: Rotation
Governing Equation with no Shear (Rigid Body Motion):
Accceleration Vector:
38
Pressure Variation, Rigid Body Motion: Rotation
Estimating the pressure between two closely spaced points apart some dr, dz:
39
Pressure Variation, Rigid Body Motion: Rotation
Now, integrate to obtain the Pressure Variation:
40
Chapter summary
41