I has been a while since I did some work in fluid dynamics but I stumbled across this b/c of a job interview so I thought that I maybe share it here.
The Bernoulli equation of fluid-dynamics is basically a law of conservation. In physics there are certain conserved quantities that stay the same during a physical transformation. An example would be energy, or momentum. The Equation derived below is basically a statement of energy conservation, however it requires a so-called ideal fluid.
An ideal fluid has the following properties:
- it is stationary and laminar (so there is no turbulence, and velocity at one point does not change)
- it has no viscosity (so there is no internal friction)
- it has no friction (with outside walls or anything else)
- it is incompressible, so the density is the same everywhere
Imagine a tube that is filled with this ideal fluid and its radius is shrinking in the middle in a conical fashion. Because we already know the equation of state (), we can make an assumption about the mass-flow within the tube.
Considering the difference in mass , that is the mass that enters the pipe in the beginning in a certain amount of time we can easily see that this must be the , which is the mass that leaves the pipe at the end in the same amount of time. This balance, also called continuity-equation, we can write as
(1)
When we consider the total work done to the fluid we have to be careful about the sign and can write it as
(2)
This total work must be equal to all other energy representations in the fluid, which we write in a way that is normalized by the mass difference
(3)
(4)
where represents the kinetic energy some form of potential (in our case ) and is a representation of internal energy. We disregard internal energy and fill in equation for we get this nice little expression:
(5)
which basically states
(6)
This is Bernoulli’s equation of fluid dynamics, it states that within a flow of constant energy the velocity of a fluid rises in fields of low pressure and lowers in fields of low pressure.
Even though we simplified the underlying physics massively there’s still a lot of phenomena to be explained using this simple equation. For example aeroplanes flying can be partially explained with this equation.