Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Hydraulic analogy
Electricity (as well as heat) was originally understood to be a kind of fluid. This hydraulic analogy is still of some use in teaching, not only for the fact that the names of the quantities are often struck by analogy.
| type | hydraulic | electric | thermal |
|---|---|---|---|
| quantity | volume V [m3] | charge q [C] | heat Q [J] |
| potential | pressure p [Pa=J/m3] | potential φ [V=J/C] | temperature T [K=J/kB] |
| flux | current ΦV [m3/s] | current I [A=C/s] | heat transfer rate [J/s]
|
| flux density | velocity v [m/s] | current density j [C/m2s] | heat flux [J/m2s]
|
| linear model | Poiseuille's law
| Ohm's law
| Fourier's law
|
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details



[J/s]
[J/m2s]