Starter track
Step 3 of 50 / 5 completeFluid and Pressure
Earlier steps still set up Bernoulli's Principle.
Previous step: Continuity Equation.
Concept module
Follow one steady ideal-flow pipe and see how pressure, speed, and height trade within the same Bernoulli budget while continuity keeps the flow-rate story honest.
Interactive lab
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Starter track
Step 3 of 50 / 5 completeEarlier steps still set up Bernoulli's Principle.
Previous step: Continuity Equation.
Why it behaves this way
Bernoulli's principle is the bounded steady-flow energy story for one streamline in an ideal incompressible fluid. If viscosity and pumps are left out, the same flow keeps trading among static pressure, kinetic energy per volume, and height. That is why the shorthand is .
This page keeps that idea compact and honest. The same pipe shows a section A entry and a raised throat B. Continuity still decides where the speed changes, because the same volume flow rate has to pass both sections. Bernoulli then tells you what happens to the static pressure when that same flow gets faster, climbs higher, or does both at once.
The point is not that fast always means low pressure in every fluid situation. The point is narrower and higher parts of this one bounded stream must spend more of the same Bernoulli budget on speed and height, so the static pressure left over there can be lower.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans32 kPa
0.18 m^3/s
0.1 m^2
0.05 m^2
0.25 m
1. Use continuity to get the throat speed
2. Read the speed-driven pressure share
3. Include the height term
4. Read the static pressure left over
Current throat state
Bernoulli checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
Bernoulli means fast flow magically causes low pressure everywhere.
On this page the lower throat pressure comes from a specific bounded steady-flow model where the same streamline keeps one Bernoulli budget.
Continuity and the pipe geometry matter first. The speed changes because the same passes through different areas, and Bernoulli explains the matching pressure trade inside that same ideal-flow setup.
Quick test
Variable effect
Question 1 of 3
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows one steady pipe with a section A entry and a raised throat B. The pipe thickness represents cross-sectional area, animated tracer dots show the flow moving through the pipe, and the speed arrows show which section is faster.
Static pressure appears as compact gauges near section A and throat B. The Bernoulli budget bars split each state into pressure, kinetic, and height shares of the same total so the pressure trade stays visible.
Compare mode ghosts an alternate pipe state so two Bernoulli setups can be read on the same bench without creating a second disconnected model.
Graph summary
The speed-throat-area graph isolates the continuity speed change that Bernoulli builds on.
The pressure graphs isolate how throat width, flow rate, and throat height reshape the throat pressure while the same bounded Bernoulli model stays in force.
Carry this through the fluids branch
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Use one immersed-block bench to connect pressure difference, displaced fluid, and the density balance behind floating, sinking, and neutral buoyancy.
Use one piston-and-tank bench to connect force per area, pressure acting in all directions, and the way density, gravity, and depth build hydrostatic pressure.
Connect pressure, volume, temperature, and particle number on one bounded particle box, then read the same pressure changes back as changes in particle speed and wall-collision rate.