I'm doing a one-semester AP Physics 2 intensive course for some very dedicated students. On a typical day we take a fundamentals quiz; we do a demo or three; then we spend lots of time doing problems and playing with the demo setups.*
*We did copious lab work in the first half of the year as part of our research projects. And these students had a Physics 1 course in which we got hands on equipment during something like 75% of our classes. I don't do so much formal lab work in this intensive, 'cause these folks have been there and done that; but they know how to play with equipment on their own. At least when they're in person rather than online. :-)
I've had to construct an AP Physics 2 fact sheet. Some of the facts can be found in other blog posts, like this one for magnetism or this one for capacitors or this one for optics.
I've never published a fluids fact sheet. Here's what I handed out today before I started lab work...
FLUIDS
Static fluids
The
pressure in a static column of fluid is P = P0 + rgh
Here
the rgh term is called the “gauge pressure,” meaning
the pressure above atmospheric.
Density
is defined as mass/volume. Thus, mass
can be expressed as rV.
The buoyant force on an object is equal to the weight of the
fluid displaced.
The equation for the buoyant force is FB = rVg, where r is the density of the FLUID and V is the volume SUBMERGED.
Flowing fluids
The continuity principle is a statement of conservation of mass: the volume flow rate (or mass flow rate) must be the same everywhere.
The continuity principle for flow of cross sectional area A and speed v says A1v1 = A2v2.
Bernoulli’s equation is a statement of conservation of energy.
Bernoulli’s equation says P + rgh + ½rv2 is constant at any two locations.