Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology Update (No access codes included)
9th Edition
ISBN: 9781305116399
Author: Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 14, Problem 14.6CQ
To determine
The reason for the tennis ball to levitate when an air from an hairdryer is directed over it.
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Chapter 14 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology Update (No access codes included)
Ch. 14 - Suppose you are standing directly behind someone...Ch. 14 - The pressure at the bottom of a filled glass of...Ch. 14 - Several common barometers are built, with a...Ch. 14 - You are shipwrecked and floating in the middle of...Ch. 14 - You observe two helium balloons floating next to...Ch. 14 - Figure OQ14.1 shows aerial views from directly...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.2OQCh. 14 - A wooden block floats in water, and a steel object...Ch. 14 - An apple is held completely submerged just below...Ch. 14 - A beach ball is made of thin plastic. It has been...
Ch. 14 - A solid iron sphere and a solid lead sphere of the...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.7OQCh. 14 - One of the predicted problems due to global...Ch. 14 - A boat develops a leak and, after its passengers...Ch. 14 - A small piece of steel is tied to a block of wood....Ch. 14 - A piece of unpainted porous wood barely floats in...Ch. 14 - A person in a boat floating in a small pond throws...Ch. 14 - Rank the buoyant forces exerted on the following...Ch. 14 - A water supply maintains a constant rate of flow...Ch. 14 - A glass of water contains floating ice cubes. When...Ch. 14 - An ideal fluid flows through a horizontal pipe...Ch. 14 - When an object is immersed in a liquid at rest,...Ch. 14 - Two thin-walled drinking glasses having equal base...Ch. 14 - Because atmospheric pressure is about 105 N/m2 and...Ch. 14 - A fish rests on the bottom of a bucket of water...Ch. 14 - You are a passenger on a spacecraft. For your...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.6CQCh. 14 - Prob. 14.7CQCh. 14 - If you release a ball while inside a freely...Ch. 14 - (a) Is the buoyant force a conservative force? (b)...Ch. 14 - All empty metal soap dish barely floats in water....Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.11CQCh. 14 - Prob. 14.12CQCh. 14 - Prob. 14.13CQCh. 14 - Does a ship float higher in the water of an inland...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.15CQCh. 14 - Prob. 14.16CQCh. 14 - Prairie dogs ventilate their burrows by building a...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.18CQCh. 14 - Prob. 14.19CQCh. 14 - A large man sits on a four-legged chair with his...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.2PCh. 14 - A 50.0-kg woman wearing high-heeled shoes is...Ch. 14 - Estimate the total mass of the Earths atmosphere....Ch. 14 - Calculate the mass of a solid gold rectangular bar...Ch. 14 - (a) A wry powerful vacuum cleaner has a hose 2.86...Ch. 14 - The spring of the pressure gauge shown in Figure...Ch. 14 - The small piston of a hydraulic lift (Fig. P14.8)...Ch. 14 - What must be the contact area between a suction...Ch. 14 - A swimming pool has dimensions 30.0 m 10.0 m and...Ch. 14 - (a) Calculate the absolute pressure at the bottom...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.12PCh. 14 - Prob. 14.13PCh. 14 - A container is filled to a depth of 20.0 cm with...Ch. 14 - Review. The lank in Figure P14.15 is filled with...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.16PCh. 14 - Prob. 14.17PCh. 14 - Review. A solid sphere of brass (bulk modulus of...Ch. 14 - Normal atmospheric pressure is 1.013 103 Pa. The...Ch. 14 - The human brain and spinal cord are immersed in...Ch. 14 - Blaise Pascal duplicated Torricellis barometer...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.22PCh. 14 - A backyard swimming pool with a circular base of...Ch. 14 - A tank with a flat bottom of area A and vertical...Ch. 14 - A table-tennis ball has a diameter of 3.80 cm and...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.26PCh. 14 - A 10.0-kg block of metal measuring 12.0 cm by 10.0...Ch. 14 - A light balloon is filled with 400 m3 of helium at...Ch. 14 - A cube of wood having an edge dimension of 20.0 cm...Ch. 14 - The United States possesses the ten largest...Ch. 14 - A plastic sphere floats in water with 50.0% of its...Ch. 14 - A spherical vessel used for deep-sea exploration...Ch. 14 - A wooden block of volume 5.24 104 m3 floats in...Ch. 14 - The weight of a rectangular block of low-density...Ch. 14 - A large weather balloon whose mass is 226 kg is...Ch. 14 - A hydrometer is an instrument used to determine...Ch. 14 - Refer to Problem 16 and Figure P14.16. A...Ch. 14 - On October 21, 2001, Ian Ashpole of the United...Ch. 14 - How many cubic meters of helium are required to...Ch. 14 - Water flowing through a garden hose of diameter...Ch. 14 - A large storage tank, open at the top and filled...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.42PCh. 14 - Prob. 14.43PCh. 14 - A village maintains a large tank with ail open...Ch. 14 - A legendary Dutch boy saved Holland by plugging a...Ch. 14 - Water falls over a dam of height h with a mass...Ch. 14 - Water is pumped up from the Colorado River to...Ch. 14 - In ideal flow, a liquid of density 850 kg/m3 moves...Ch. 14 - The Venturi tube discussed in Example 14.8 and...Ch. 14 - Review. Old Faithful Geyser in Yellowstone...Ch. 14 - An airplane is cruising al altitude 10 km. The...Ch. 14 - An airplane has a mass of 1.60 104 kg, and each...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.53PCh. 14 - The Bernoulli effect can have important...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.55PCh. 14 - Decades ago, it was thought that huge herbivorous...Ch. 14 - (a) Calculate the absolute pressure at an ocean...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.58APCh. 14 - A spherical aluminum ball of mass 1.26 kg contains...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.60APCh. 14 - Review. Figure P14.61 shows a valve separating a...Ch. 14 - The true weight of an object can be measured in a...Ch. 14 - Water is forced out of a fire extinguisher by air...Ch. 14 - Review. Assume a certain liquid, with density 1...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.65APCh. 14 - Prob. 14.66APCh. 14 - Prob. 14.67APCh. 14 - A common parameter that can be used to predict...Ch. 14 - Evangelista Torricelli was the first person to...Ch. 14 - Review. With reference to the dam studied in...Ch. 14 - A 1.00-kg beaker containing 2.00 kg of oil...Ch. 14 - A beaker of mass mb containing oil of mass mu and...Ch. 14 - In 1983, the United States began coining the...Ch. 14 - Review. A long, cylindrical rod of radius r is...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.75APCh. 14 - The spirit-in-glass thermometer, invented in...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.77APCh. 14 - Review. In a water pistol, a piston drives water...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.79APCh. 14 - The water supply of a building is fed through a...Ch. 14 - A U-tube open at both ends is partially filled...Ch. 14 - A woman is draining her fish tank by siphoning the...Ch. 14 - The hull of an experimental boat is to be lifted...Ch. 14 - Prob. 14.84APCh. 14 - An ice cube whose edges measure 20.0 mm is...Ch. 14 - Why is the following situation impossible? A barge...Ch. 14 - Show that the variation of atmospheric pressure...
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- Review. In a water pistol, a piston drives water through a large tube of area A1 into a smaller tube of area A2 as shown in Figure P14.46. The radius of the large tube is 1.00 cm and that of the small tube is 1.00 mm. The smaller tube is 3.00 cm above the larger tube. (a) If the pistol is fired horizontally at a height of 1.50 m, determine the time interval required for the water to travel from the nozzle to the ground. Neglect air resistance and assume atmospheric pressure is 1.00 atm. (b) If the desired range of the stream is 8.00 m, with what speed v2 must the stream leave the nozzle? (c) At what speed v1 must the plunger be moved to achieve the desired range? (d) What is the pressure at the nozzle? (e) Find the pressure needed in the larger tube. (f) Calculate the force that must be exerted on the trigger to achieve the desired range. (The force that must be exerted is due to pressure over and above atmospheric pressure.) Figure P14.46arrow_forwardWhy is it preferable for airplanes to take off into the wind rather than with the wind?arrow_forwardA host pours the remnants of several of wine into a jug a party. The host then inserts a cork with a 2.00-cm diameter into the bottle, placing it in direct contact with the wine. The host is amazed when the host pounds the cork into place and the bottom of the jug (with a 14.0-cm diameter) breaks away. Calculate the extra force exerted against the bottom if he pounded the cork with a 120-N force.arrow_forward
- We stated in Example 11.12 that a xylem tube is of radius 2.50105 m. Verify that such a tube raises sap less than a meter by finding h for it, making the same assumptions that sap's density is 1050 kg/m3, its contact angle is zero, and its surface tension is the same as that of water at 20.0°c.arrow_forwardSuppose you hit a steel nail with a 0.500-kg hammer, initially moving at 15.0 m/s and brought to rest in 2.80 mm. (a) What average force is exerted on the nail? (b) How much is the nail compressed if it is 2.50 mm in diameter and 6.00-cm long? (c) What pressure is created on the 1.00-mm-diameter tip of the nail?arrow_forwardYou can squirt water a considerably greater distance by placing your thumb over the end of a garden hose and then releasing, than by leaving it completely uncovered. Explain how this works.arrow_forward
- Review. A mixing beater consists of three thin rods, each 10.0 cm long. The rods diverge from a central hub, separated from each other by 120, and all turn in the same plane. A ball is attached to the end of each rod. Each ball has cross-sectional area 4.00 cm2 and is so shaped that it has a drag coefficient of 0.600. Calculate the power input required to spin the beater at 1 000 rev/min (a) in air and (b) in water.arrow_forwardReview. A mixing beater consists of three thin rods, each 10.0 cm long. The rods diverge from a central hub, separated from each other by 120, and all turn in the same plane. A ball is attached to the end of each rod. Each ball has cross-sectional area 4.00 cm2 and is so shaped that it has a drag coefficient of 0.600. Calculate the power input required to spin the beater at 1 000 rev/min (a) in air and (b) in water.arrow_forward
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