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Torricelli's equation

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In physics, Torricelli's equation, or Torricelli's formula, is an equation created by Evangelista Torricelli to find the final velocity of a moving object with constant acceleration along an axis (for example, the x axis) without having a known time interval.

The equation itself is:[1]

where

  • is the object's final velocity along the x axis on which the acceleration is constant.
  • is the object's initial velocity along the x axis.
  • is the object's acceleration along the x axis, which is given as a constant.
  • is the object's change in position along the x axis, also called displacement.

In this and all subsequent equations in this article, the subscript (as in ) is implied, but is not expressed explicitly for clarity in presenting the equations.

This equation is valid along any axis on which the acceleration is constant.

Derivation

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Without differentials and integration

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Begin with the following relations for the case of uniform acceleration:

(1)
(2)

Take (1), and multiply both sides with acceleration

(3)

The following rearrangement of the right hand side makes it easier to recognize the coming substitution:

(4)

Use (2) to substitute the product :

(5)

Work out the multiplications:

(6)

The crossterms drop away against each other, leaving only squared terms:

(7)

(7) rearranges to the form of Torricelli's equation as presented at the start of the article:

(8)

Using differentials and integration

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Begin with the definitions of velocity as the derivative of the position, and acceleration as the derivative of the velocity:

(9)
(10)

Set up integration from initial position to final position

(11)

In accordance with (9) we can substitute with , with corresponding change of limits.

(12)

Here changing the order of and makes it easier to recognize the upcoming substitution.

(13)

In accordance with (10) we can substitute with , with corresponding change of limits.

(14)

So we have:

(15)


Since the acceleration is constant, we can factor it out of the integration:

(16)

Evaluating the integration:

(17)
(18)

The factor is the displacement :

(19)
(20)

Application

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Combining Torricelli's equation with gives the work-energy theorem.

Torricelli's equation and the generalization to non-uniform acceleration have the same form:

Repeat of (16):

(21)

Evaluating the right hand side:

(22)

To compare with Torricelli's equation: repeat of (7):

(23)

To derive the work-energy theorem: start with and on both sides state the integral with respect to the position coordinate. If both sides are integrable then the resulting expression is valid:

(24)

Use (22) to process the right hand side:

(25)


The reason that the right hand sides of (22) and (23) are the same:

First consider the case with two consecutive stages of different uniform acceleration, first from to , and then from to .

Expressions for each of the two stages:


Since these expressions are for consecutive intervals they can be added; the result is a valid expression.

Upon addition the intermediate term drops out; only the outer terms and remain:

(26)

The above result generalizes: the total distance can be subdivided into any number of subdivisions; after adding everything together only the outer terms remain; all of the intermediate terms drop out.

The generalization of (26) to an arbitrary number of subdivisions of the total interval from to can be expressed as a summation:

(27)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Leandro Bertoldo (2008). Fundamentos do Dinamismo (in Portuguese). Joinville: Clube de Autores. pp. 41–42.
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