pito tüpü

listen to the pronunciation of pito tüpü
التركية - الإنجليزية
(Askeri,Teknik) pitot tube
A pressure measuring instrument used to measure fluid flow velocity, especially used to determine the airspeed of an aircraft
(Pronounced pee-toe After Henri Pitot, 1695-1771, French scientist ) An open-ended tube or tube arrangement which, when immersed in a moving fluid with its mouth pointed upstream, may be used to measure the stagnation pressure of the fluid for subsonic flow; or the stagnation pressure behind the tube's normal shock wave for supersonic flow
An L-shaped, open tube, one end connected to a pressure measuring device, the other end placed in a flow with the opening facing the wind Can be used to measure the total pressure of a flow (stagnation pressure) In conjunction with a static pressure measurement the flow velocity can be calculated, if the density of the fluid is known A device, which combines both pressure measurements is a pitot-static tube (at least in Germany also called a Prandtl-tube)
measuring instrument consisting of a combined Pitot tube and static tube that measures total and static pressure; used in aircraft to measure airspeed
A device consisting of two small, concentric tubes, one inside the other, that can be inserted into a pipe carrying fluids to measure the flow of liquid or gas in the pipe The tubes are so arranged that one is affected by the total pressure (velocity head + static pressure head) of the fluid and the other by the static pressure existing in the pipe The outlet ends of the tubes are connected to either side of a manometer tube and the difference in pressure so measured is a function of the velocity of the fluid flowing in the pipe ahead of the tube
a sensor to measure fluid velocity by generating a pressure that is the difference between the total static pressure and the dynamic pressure
Instrument for measuring the velocity (speed) of a flowing fluid. Invented by Henri Pitot (1695-1771), it consists of a tube with a short, right-angled bend, which is placed vertically in a moving fluid with the mouth of the bent part directed upstream; the pressure, measured with an attached device, depends on the fluid flow and can be used to calculate the velocity. Pitot tubes are used to measure airspeed in wind tunnels and aboard aircraft in flight; they are also used to measure the flow of liquids (see flow meter)
A sensing device used to measure total pressures in a fluid stream It was invented by a French physicist, Henri Pitot, in the 1700's (0301)
measuring instrument used to measure the velocity of fluid flow
An instrument for measuring the relative speed of a fluid It consists of a concentric pipe arrangement in which the inner pipe is open at one end and the outer pipe is perforated and closed at both ends Each pipe is connected to a manometer The unit is operated with the open end pointing upstream, so that the inner pipe measures the total pressure and the outer pipe measures the static pressure The difference between these pressures, the dynamic pressure, is proportional to the square of the fluid speed
pito tüpü
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