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#181
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"Morgans" wrote in
: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote What's it matter? Yo'll never be a pilot. Any math that wil enable you to dial up for home delivered pizza and escargot should suffice. # Are you kidding? He doesn't have a job to provide enough money for escargot. The only escargot he is going to see is from the snails he plucks out of the river! Mmmmmm! Nah, they're cheap enough in France. They sell 'em on the streets for about $2 a bag. I can speak on this with some authority, BTW, since that's where I am today and I seen some for sale. Bertie |
#182
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Le Chaud Lapin wrote in
ups.com: On Oct 16, 6:31 am, Thomas wrote: On 9 Oct, 21:08, Le Chaud Lapin wrote: You may want to check out my web pageshttp://www.physicsmyths.org.uk/bernoulli.htm andhttp://www.physicsmyths.org.uk/drag.htm for a closer examination of the physics behind the aerodynamic lift and drag. The main point I am making there is that it is physically nonsense to claim that changing merely the tangential velocity of the air stream relative to the surface would in any way produce a resultant force (at least for a non-viscous gas). What one needs for a pressure change (and thus a force) on the surface is a change in the numbers and/or the velocity of the molecules hitting it, i.e. it is only the vertical component of the velocity that is relevant here. Only this can produce the lift for an airfoil, either because of the increased number of collisions on the lower side or the decreased number of collisions on the upper side (both situations lead to a lift). I agree, but there are some that seem to think the contrary, as you know, with the Coanda effect. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coand%C4%83_effect What is troubling about many of these theories is that, at the precise moment where the reader is most alert in anticipation of the meat of the explanation, the hand-waving begins. In the link above, the clause entitled Causes, it is written: "The effect of a spoon apparently attracting a flow of water is caused by this effect as well, since the flow of water entrains gases to flow down along the stream, and these gases are then pulled, along with the flow of water, in towards the spoon, as a result of the pressure differential. " Hmmm...."and these gases are then pulled"... pulled? By what? And it should be obvious that for this to be the case, one must either have the lower side of the wing facing to a certain degree into the airstream, and/or the upper side facing to a certain degree opposite to the airstream. This is why one either needs a certain 'angle of attack' or a correspondingly shaped airfoil. And it should be obvious that in order to have an asymmetric force (i.e. a higher upward than downward force) one needs the surfaces of the airfoil to be orientated in some way asymmetrical relatively to the airstream. So a perfectly symmetrical airfoil (front to back) at a zero angle of attack (like I indicated in Fig.1 on my pagehttp://www.physicsmyths.org.uk/bernoulli.htm) should not produce any lift as the upward force (from the rear part) is exactly equal to the downward force (from the front part). All that would happen is that the wing experiences an anti-clockwise torque. This is the reason why the rear part of the wing (behind the apex) must always have a larger surface than the front part. At least I have yet to see an airfoil where this is not the case and where it can be used at a zero angle of attack. (the Bernoulli principle is in direct contradiction to this as it would also predict a lift for a perfectly symmetric airfoil in this sense). I just read both your web pages. BTW, your explanation of d'Alembert's Paradox and the blow-over-paper- attached-to-table experiment could both use diagrams. I am trying the blow over the paper experiment now and I am not sure if I am doing it as you described. Could you provide a more vivid description so I can make sure? MAybe if you took your head out of your ass first.. Bertie |
#183
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![]() "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote MAybe if you took your head out of your ass first.. Or bend over, and blow it up your ass. -- Jim in NC |
#184
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Morgans wrote:
"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote MAybe if you took your head out of your ass first.. Or bend over, and blow it up your ass. Well, damn! He did it!!!!!!!!!!!! http://www.members.cox.net/drpics/hua2.jpg |
#185
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BDS writes:
Please do. Might I suggest you try a different approach when you ask someone for help? Like genuflection? |
#186
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Le Chaud Lapin writes:
What about my orignial post is abrasive and insulting? You refused to submit to the alpha dog and his pack. |
#187
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: BDS writes: Please do. Might I suggest you try a different approach when you ask someone for help? Like genuflection? Or you could just kiss my ring. Bertie |
#188
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Le Chaud Lapin writes: What about my orignial post is abrasive and insulting? You refused to submit to the alpha dog and his pack. God I love usenet. Bertie |
#189
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On 17 Oct, 00:48, Le Chaud Lapin wrote:
On Oct 16, 3:31 pm, Thomas wrote: On 16 Oct, 19:41, Jim Logajan wrote: Thomas wrote: You may want to check out my web pages http://www.physicsmyths.org.uk/bernoulli.htmand http://www.physicsmyths.org.uk/drag.htmfora closer examination of the physics behind the aerodynamic lift and drag. You might want to actually _include_ Bernoulli's theorem somewhere in your pages. You talk about Bernoulli's equation, Bernoulli's principle, and Bernoulli's law. And yet none of them are actually presented. Are you saying they all the same or all different? Why not use the terminology used by the professionals and stick with "Bernoulli's theorem"? How about including references to relevant texts on your pages? It's not like serious texts and lab experiments haven't been done on the subject for a zillion years. It helps to show you know what you're talking about by showing you've first read the professional literature on the subject and done your own relevant research. You might also want to redraw your figures so they include vertical labeled arrows. Then present the assumptions and math needed to show your work and why you think the vertical magnitudes sum to zero. Just saying they do, or they only yield a torque, isn't good enough. It is more useful to _show_ - not pontificate and hand-wave. P.S. Chapter section 40-3 in volume 2 of Feynman's Lectures on Physics is as good a place as any to start. Bernoulli's theorem is not a fundamental physical law and thus not required to understand the principle behind the aerodynamic lift. And its misinterpretation and misapplication quite evidently leads to incorrect physical conclusions, like the claim that a moving gas would inherently have a lower static pressure than a stationary one. The net flow velocity of a gas has per se nothing to do with the static pressure. I so agree. The amout of hand-waving that goes on when (presumably technically-inclined) individuals invoke Bernoulli is perplexing. Oddly, my college physics book is almost as guilty - after chapters and chapters of Newtonian mechanics that are quite clear, they seem to imply just that. It is not so much a case of 'hand waving' arguments, but of insufficient and contradictory physical definitions (especially with regard to the notion of an 'inviscid' gas). Applying some physical equation to a situation where it can not be applied is bound to lead to paradoxes and wrong results. As a thought experiment, consider a large tank containing gas with a pipe attached to it which leads into a vacuum space. Assume first this pipe is closed at the end; then the flow velocity in the pipe is zero because the molecules heading outwards will be reflected at the end and reverse their velocity (assume for simplicity that the molecules do not collide with each other but only with the walls of the pipe and the tank). If one now opens the pipe, the only thing that changes is that the molecules heading outwards will not be reflected anymore at the end but simply carry on heading into the vacuum space (with the corresponding loss of molecules being replaced from the large tank). So we now have a net flow velocity within the pipe without that either the density nor the speed of the molecules has changed in any way. This means that the pressure exerted on the inside wall of the pipe is unchanged despite the fact that we now have a net flow velocity within it. So Bernoulli's theorem would quite evidently give a wrong result here. Hmmm...technically, someone could argue that, in the vicinity of the exit hole of the tank, there would be resulting decrease in pressure, which would be true. As should be evident from what I said above already, for an inviscid gas (i.e. assuming the molecules do not collide with each other but only with the walls), it should not make any difference whatsoever if the pipe is open or closed at the end. The rate with which the molecules hit the inside wall (and thus the pressure on it) is exactly the same anywhere within the pipe (assuming the lost molecules for the open pipe situation are readily replaced from the tank). The misapplication, I think, results from too much hand-waving and not being very specific about what pressure decreases over what. A venturi apparutus, for example, very clearly demonstrates a drop in pressure, and that drop is real, but the points chosen to measure the pressure in the apparutus is very specific. The Venturi effect (like the paper sheet example, the Coanda effect and the Magnus effect) is merely a result of the viscosity of the medium. It does not occur for an ideally inviscid medium (i.e. if the collisions of molecules amongst each other can be neglected), whereas the aerodynamic lift does. Thomas |
#190
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... Le Chaud Lapin writes: What about my orignial post is abrasive and insulting? You refused to submit to the alpha dog and his pack. What, no blame for the angry young males that incessantly torment you? BDS |
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