Fluid mechanics is trading places. Since 2015, fluids has been part of the P2 curriculum, for the 25,000 or so students who take that exam. But next year, fluids moves over to P1 and its 150,000 students. So now's probably a good time to share some thoughts about teaching fluids.
I do recommend coming to an AP Summer Institute, where you can see me do this and other fluids demonstrations live! You can see my APSI schedule in the left sidebar.
Pressure in a static column
When a tank of fluid is not moving, the pressure anywhere in the fluid is given by P =P0 + ρgy. Here P0 represents the pressure at the surface* of the fluid, ρ is the fluid density, and y is the depth below the surface at the position where you're measuring pressure.
*Yes, this is *usually* atmospheric pressure... but not always. Consider one fluid on top of another. The pressure in the bottom layer is the pressure at *its surface* plus ρgy.
I have one of them giant graduated cylinders filled nearly to the top with water. My pressure sensor is connected to my ipad under the document camera; I set the Vernier Graphical Analysis app to produce a graph of pressure vs. time.
I attach a long tube to the pressure sensor. First, I read the pressure when the tube is NOT submerged - this is P0. The sensor generally reads in kPa; we want a reading in Pa, where 1 Pa is equal to 1 newton per square meter.
Next, I announce that I will predict the pressure sensor reading when the tube is submerged to the very bottom of the container. The relevant equation is P =P0 + ρgy. What additional information do we need?
We have the surface pressure - usually around 102,000 Pa, but that varies by weather and especially altitude. We can measure the depth y with a meterstick - this is usually about 18 cm, i.e. 0.18 m. We know the gravitational field g to be 10 N/kg.
What about the density of water?
AP Physics 1 does not require unit conversions! The number of times that a student is even asked to give a numerical answer to anything is minimal. So for this in-class problem where conversions are necessary, I do the conversions in my head and state the result; or I use google ("convert 102 kPa to Pa"). De-emphasize number crunching, and you'll un-de-emphasize concepts. :-)
Very cool demo!!! I am teaching AP Physics 1 next year and currently have nothing for fluids. In fact, I haven't studied or thought about fluids since I took AP Physics B in 2014-2015 (Eep!). What materials would you suggest to get a fluids lab going? Would you suggest a set per group of these pressure sensors or just one for me to start out? The $100 price tag is making me nervous to invest in one of these per group. Thank you so much for the amazing demos and advice!!!
ReplyDeleteHi! I'd start with one pressure sensor, and get more if you decide to do this as a full-on lab exercise. Check with your biology department - they may have some of these sensors that you can borrow for a day's lab work!
ReplyDeleteHere is the post where I discussed fluids equipment, and why you don't really need anything additional: https://jacobsphysics.blogspot.com/2022/03/fluids-is-coming-what-equipment-do-i.html