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by RiderOfGiraffes
6165 days ago
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> You can't say, is it the Bernoulli effect or is it the fact that the wing makes the air behind it go down. Those are both different ways of expressing the same thing. You can't have one without the other. Actually, you can. It's fairly straight-forward to construct an example where you do get the Bernoulli effect and there is no downwash. What is true is that when you fly you have both, and both contribute. What's more true is that there are many effects, each of which contributes, many of which are inter-dependent, and all of which are simple in isolation, and complex in interaction and action. |
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In the venturi, the pressure is lower where the speed is higher, that's a fact. But is the pressure lower because the speed is higher, or is the speed higher because the pressure is lower? That question makes no sense, because it depends on how you think about it.
On the one hand, you can say: mass conservation dictates that the fluid must go faster in the narrow part of the tube. If the fluid is to go faster, it must accelerate, so there must be a pressure gradient. Hence, the pressure in the narrow part must be lower.
On the other hand, you can say: Since the fluid goes faster in the narrow part of the tube, the pressure is lower there. Since the pressure is lower, there's a pressure gradient, and that's what causes the fluid to speed up.
Neither of these explanations make sense, because there is no cause and effect in the problem, it's just that one state globally obeys all constraints on the fluid and that's the state with higher speed and lower pressure in the narrow part.