Lecture Atlas

//09.prep

EGD102 · week 9

Workshop prep

Twenty minutes or less.

Week 9 — Pressure Measurement + Forces on Submerged Surfaces. Pick a mode. Start a timer. That's it.

Pick a mode

The shortest path to walking in prepared.

Timer

5:00

//content

5-minute version

Two threads, one sentence each.

  • Manometer / pressure measurement — walk the path, down adds , up subtracts , neglect the air column.
  • Submerged surface, line of action at , always below the centroid.

Then for a hinged gate: find , find , take moments about the hinge.

Open the cheatsheet quiz, do 3 easy questions, close it. You’re prepped.

20-minute prep plan

TimeAction
0–5 minSkim the cheatsheet tables — especially the centroid table and the table.
5–10 minRe-do Tutorial Exercise 3 (sea-water lock) from scratch — covering pen, write it out. Targets all four steps.
10–15 minTake the cheatsheet quiz. Don’t worry about the score.
15–20 minRead the “centre of pressure” derivation in the in-depth note — section 2. The parallel-axis argument is the bit that sticks.

What to revise first

Most students slip on three specific things this week:

  1. Centroid depth measured from the wrong place. is from the free surface, not from the top of the plate. Always add the depth of the top edge to the in-plate offset.
  2. vs . Rectangles use . Triangles use . Same shape of formula, different denominator.
  3. Manometer walk sign error. Down adds, up subtracts. Sanity check: set all heights to zero, equation should reduce to .

If you only fix those three, you’ll pick up the bulk of the available marks.

Key formulas

Likely workshop tasks

Task typeWhat the setup usually looks like
Manometer (single fluid)One U-tube, height difference , ambient on one side. Find the gauge or absolute pressure on the other.
Manometer (multi-fluid)Two pipes connected via Hg + air gap. Walk the path; find .
Rectangular submerged plateVertical rectangle, top edge at given depth. Find , , possibly the holding force on a hinge.
Triangular submerged plateApex up or apex down; remember from the apex (apex up) and .
Hinged gateAdd a moment balance: , solve for the unknown force.
Vertical dam (extends to free surface)Use the shortcut: , acts at above base.

Mistakes to avoid

  • measured from the wrong reference (top of plate, bottom of plate, ground — only the free surface is correct).
  • Confusing (rectangle) with (triangle).
  • Putting the centre of pressure above the centroid.
  • Mixing absolute and gauge pressure. For a gate open to atmosphere on both sides, use gauge.
  • Wrong sign on the manometer walk.
  • Treating as a density (it’s a ratio — multiply by ).
  • Forgetting the moment arm of goes to , not , when summing moments.
  • Inconsistent within a single calculation. Pick or and stick with it.

Mini self-test

Try these without notes. Eight minutes total. Use m/s², kg/m³.

  1. A vertical rectangular plate m wide and m tall has its top edge at the free surface. Find the magnitude and line of action (height above base) of the resultant water force.
  2. A right-triangular plate with vertical leg m and horizontal leg m has its apex at the water surface (apex up, base at the bottom). Find , , , and .
  3. A U-tube manometer connects an air tank to atmosphere. Mercury ( kg/m³) stands mm higher on the atmosphere side. Atmospheric pressure is kPa. What is the absolute air-tank pressure?

Answers:

QuestionAnswer
1 kN, acts at m above the base.
2 m; m²; m⁴; m.
3Hg higher on atmosphere side air pressure is below atmospheric. kPa absolute.

Done checklist

  • Read the cheatsheet tables (centroid + ).
  • Re-did Tutorial Exercise 3 (or Example 1) longhand.
  • Cheatsheet quiz attempted.
  • Mini self-test attempted.
  • Can explain in one sentence why (pressure prism wedge → centroid below the surface’s centroid).

That’s it. Close the laptop.

Source files used

  • EGD102-Physics/Lecture9_CTP1.pdf
  • EGD102-Physics/EGD102_Week9_Lecture.pdf
  • EGD102-Physics/Tutorial 9.pdf
  • EGD102-Physics/Tutorial 9_Solutions.pdf