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Phy 102: Fundamentals of Physics II

Phy 102: Fundamentals of Physics II. Chapter 14 Lecture Notes. Robert Boyle (1627-1691). Irish-born, English Chemist The first prominent scientist to carry out controlled experiments Used rigorous experimental and quantitative methods Published results in detail

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Phy 102: Fundamentals of Physics II

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  1. Phy 102: Fundamentals of Physics II Chapter 14 Lecture Notes

  2. Robert Boyle (1627-1691) • Irish-born, English Chemist • The first prominent scientist to carry out controlled experiments • Used rigorous experimental and quantitative methods • Published results in detail • Main Scientific Contributions: • Proposed the first modern definition of a chemicalelement • Ironically he did not believe in the physical reality of atoms • Designed the first vacuum pump • The first to use color indicators to test acidity • Considered by many to be the “Father of Modern Chemistry”

  3. Gases • Matter that has no definite shape and no definite volume • Take the shape of their container • Take the volume of the container • Gases are fluids • Gas particles have very little interaction with each other (except collisions) • Since gases take the volume of their container, the density is not constant • Depends on temperature and pressure

  4. Atmospheric Pressure • Varies with elevation • decreases as you increase in elevation • decreases as air density decreases Note: Air Pressure = weight density x depth or P = r x H H is measured from the top down (it is depth not height) However: • Air density (r) decreases as you increase in elevation • At sea level, 1 cubic meter has a mass of 1-and-¼ kilograms (rair ~ 12.5 N/m3)

  5. Barometers • Devices that measure pressure of the atmosphere • A typical mercury barometer: • Closed end (P = 0) • Open end exposed to atmosphere • The mercury in the closed end drops until its weight is balanced by the atmospheric pressure • The mercury column (the meter) will • increase as atmospheric pressure increases • decrease as atmospheric pressure decreases

  6. Boyle’s Law • The relationship between pressure & volume for an enclosed gas at constant temperature • Presented by Boyle (but not discovered by him!) • For an enclosed gas the product of pressure times volume is a constant value, or Pressure1 x Volume1 = Pressure2 x Volume2 or P1V1= P2V2 • Increases/decreases in volume result in inversely proportional change in pressure (vice versa) • Valid only when the temperature is kept constant.

  7. Example Pressure vs. Volume Curve

  8. Bernoulli’s Principle • When the speed of a fluid increases its pressure decreases • Ever ask yourself: • Why do golf balls have dimples? • Why does a pitcher scuff the baseball before throwing it? • Why do loose papers fly out the window when you are driving down the road? • Why don’t airplanes fall out of the sky (at least not most of the time…)? • The answers to these questions, my friends, lie in Bernoulli’s Principle… Pressure Difference = DP = ½ Dv2

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