1 / 9

6 Life in a Fluid Medium

6 Life in a Fluid Medium. How is seawater different than Air? More viscous More dense (density increases linearly with salinity) Lower levels of O2 in water. How is living in seawater different than living in air?? O2 can be obtained from solution

saburo
Télécharger la présentation

6 Life in a Fluid Medium

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 6Life in a Fluid Medium

  2. How is seawater different than Air? • More viscous • More dense (density increases linearly with salinity) • Lower levels of O2 in water • How is living in seawater different than living in air?? • O2 can be obtained from solution • More supportive medium than air (no need for skeletons) • Movement is much more difficult (viscous) NOTE: freezing temp of seawater is –1.9 C

  3. Streamline • CONSIDER FLUID MOVING IN STREAMLINES: • Water flow can be visualized as streamlines.Particles entrained in flow move with • streamlines and do not cross. • Inertial and viscous forces compete. Cylinder (in cross section)

  4. Reynolds Number, Re: measure of relative importance of viscous and inertial forces in fluid Note that we are always working with seawater, so we Consider no variation in  (density) or  (viscosity)Therefore we conclude that Re increases with velocity (V) and size of object (l).

  5. We can make a calculation of Re if an object is moving in water or stationary, with the water moving past the object. l V l V

  6. Reynolds numbers for a range of swimming organisms and sperm

  7. Reynolds number implications • Re > 1000 : inertial forces predominate • Re < 1 : viscous forces predominate World of very small size and velocity is a viscous world; takes continuous work to move an object. Particles will stop moving when no work exerted (e.g., ciliate can stop instantaneously and reverse direction by simply stopping waving of external cilia). World of large size and high velocity is an inertial world; if work is done, object will tend to continue to move in fluid (e.g., supertanker at full speed will continue to move several km after propulsive power shut off).

  8. Drag • Water moving past an object creates drag. • At high Reynolds number, the pressure difference up and downstream explains the pressure drag. Streamlining and placing the long axis of a structure parallel to the flow will both reduce pressure drag. • At low Reynolds number, the interaction of the surface with the flow creates skin friction.

  9. Drag and fish form. The left hand fish is streamlined and creates relatively little pressure drag while swimming. the right hand fish is more disk shaped and vortices are created behind the fish, which creates a pressure difference and, therefore, increased pressure drag. This disk shape, however, allows the fish to rapidly turn.

More Related