| Robert Gordon Blaine - Hydraulic engineering - 1897 - 456 pages
...which is about '97. Hence, propelling force F = - XAX z'2 32-2 or F = 2 X 62-4 XAX h; a force equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the area of the jet, and whose height is twice that due to the velocity of the jet. If the vessel moves... | |
| Theodore Francis Van Wagenen - Hydraulic mining - 1900 - 118 pages
...on the Horizontal Bottom of u Vessel is wholly independent of the shape of the vessel^ and is equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the area of the horizontal bottom, and whose height is equal to the depth of the liquid. 3. The Pressure... | |
| Henry Smith Carhart, Horatio Nelson Chute - Physics - 1901 - 464 pages
...water having the face d as a base and of a height dn. On c there is an upward pressure which is equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the area c, and whose height is en. The upward pressure therefore exceeds the downward pressure by the... | |
| Edward Richard Shaw - 1901 - 342 pages
...seventy-eight inches of water in it ? The pressure upon the side of a tank, or reservoir, is equal to the weight of a column of water, whose base is the surface pressed upon, and whose height is the depth of the water to the middle point of that surface,... | |
| Charles George Warnford Lock - Metallurgy - 1901 - 438 pages
...on the Horizontal Bottom of a Vessel is wholly independent of the shape of the vessel, and is equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the area of the horizontal bottom, and whose height is equal to the depth of the liquid. 3. The Pressure... | |
| Henry Smith Carhart, Horatio Nelson Chute - Physics - 1912 - 468 pages
...column of water having the face d as a base, and the height dn. On c there is an upward pressure equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the area of c, and whose height is on. The upward pressure therefore exceeds the downward pressure by the... | |
| Edward Butler - Hydraulic machinery - 1913 - 508 pages
...the propelling force of which = 1-95 X area of nozzle X 0-97 «2 — ie, the force of a jet is equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the area of a jet X by a height 1-95 that .due to its velocity ; and the rate of flow in cubic feet per... | |
| Henry Smith Carhart, Horatio Nelson Chute - Physics - 1917 - 572 pages
...column of water having the face d as a base, and the height dn. On c there is an upward force equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the area of e, and whose height is on. FIGURE 48. — ILLUSTRATING PRINCIPLE OF ARCHIMEDES. FIGURE 49.... | |
| Harvard University - Education - 1874 - 378 pages
...its action, and prove that when in regular action the force necessary to raise the piston is equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the area of the piston, and whose height is the height through which the water is raised. 11. Prove that... | |
| Institution of Civil Engineers (Great Britain) - Civil engineering - 1864 - 582 pages
...into motion in a fluid at rest, is, by the application of the hydraulic law just referred to, equal to the weight of a column of water whose base is the moving plane, and altitude that due to the velocity. Here again, however, and probably arising from... | |
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