Syllabus Dot Point
Bernoulli’s principle and its application to
– venturi effect
– lift
What is the Bernoulli's principle?
The principle is that a fluid's energy equals the fluid's pressure times it's speed. (E=pv) This means that with more speed there is less pressure, and with less speed there is more pressure. Bernoulli experimented with a device called a venturi tube.
Then because of the shape of an airplane’s wing, called an airfoil, the air into which the airplane flies is split at the wing’s leading edge, passing above and below the wing at different speeds so that the air will reach the same endpoint along the trailing edge of the wing at the same time. In general, the wing’s upper surface is curved so that the air rushing over the top of the wing speeds up and stretches out, which decreases the air pressure above the wing. In contrast, the air flowing below the wing moves in a straighter line, thus its speed and pressure remain about the same. Since high pressure always moves toward low pressure, the air below the wing pushes upward toward the air above the wing. The wing, in the middle, is then “lifted” by the force of the air perpendicular to the wing. The faster an airplane moves, the more lift there is. When the force of lift is greater than the force of gravity, the airplane is able to fly, and because of thrust, the airplane is able to move forward in flight.