--- title: "Newton's bucket" sort_title: "Newton's bucket" date: 2021-05-13 categories: - Physics - Fluid mechanics - Fluid statics layout: "concept" --- **Newton's bucket** is a cylindrical bucket that rotates at angular velocity $$\omega$$. Due to [viscosity](/know/concept/viscosity/), any liquid in the bucket is affected by the rotation, eventually achieving the exact same $$\omega$$. However, once in equilibrium, the liquid's surface is not flat, but curved upwards from the center. This is due to the centrifugal force $$\va{F}_\mathrm{f} = m \va{f}$$ on a molecule with mass $$m$$: $$\begin{aligned} \va{f} = \omega^2 \va{r} \end{aligned}$$ Where $$\va{r}$$ is the molecule's position relative to the axis of rotation. This (fictitious) force can be written as the gradient of a potential $$\Phi_\mathrm{f}$$, such that $$\va{f} = - \nabla \Phi_\mathrm{f}$$: $$\begin{aligned} \Phi_\mathrm{f} = - \frac{\omega^2}{2} r^2 = - \frac{\omega^2}{2} (x^2 + y^2) \end{aligned}$$ In addition, each molecule feels a gravitational force $$\va{F}_\mathrm{g} = m \va{g}$$, where $$\va{g} = - \nabla \Phi_\mathrm{g}$$: $$\begin{aligned} \Phi_\mathrm{g} = \mathrm{g} z \end{aligned}$$ Overall, the molecule therefore feels an "effective" force with a potential $$\Phi$$ given by: $$\begin{aligned} \Phi = \Phi_\mathrm{g} + \Phi_\mathrm{f} = \mathrm{g} z - \frac{\omega^2}{2} (x^2 + y^2) \end{aligned}$$ At equilibrium, the [hydrostatic pressure](/know/concept/hydrostatic-pressure/) $$p$$ in the liquid is the one that satisfies: $$\begin{aligned} \frac{\nabla p}{\rho} = - \nabla \Phi \end{aligned}$$ Removing the gradients gives integration constants $$p_0$$ and $$\Phi_0$$, so the equilibrium equation is: $$\begin{aligned} p - p_0 = - \rho (\Phi - \Phi_0) \end{aligned}$$ We isolate this for $$p$$ and rewrite $$\Phi_0 = \mathrm{g} z_0$$, where $$z_0$$ is the liquid height at the center: $$\begin{aligned} p = p_0 - \rho \mathrm{g} (z - z_0) + \frac{\omega^2}{2} \rho (x^2 + y^2) \end{aligned}$$ At the surface, we demand that $$p = p_0$$, where $$p_0$$ is the air pressure. The $$z$$-coordinate at which this is satisfied is as follows, telling us that the surface is parabolic: $$\begin{aligned} z = z_0 + \frac{\omega^2}{2 \mathrm{g}} (x^2 + y^2) \end{aligned}$$ ## References 1. B. Lautrup, *Physics of continuous matter: exotic and everyday phenomena in the macroscopic world*, 2nd edition, CRC Press.