Key examples — Newtonian mechanics
Where the chapter’s machinery shows up across the bookshelf.
This sub-page collects worked examples that apply the mechanics chapter to specific systems in Sound, Hearing, and Cavitation. Each example points back to the relevant section of the core chapter and forward to the consumer lesson where the result is used.
Example 1: the middle-ear lever
The malleus and incus of the middle ear function as a lever, with the malleus arm slightly longer than the incus arm (ratio ). Applying the torque-balance law from the chapter, the force amplification across the ossicular chain is . Combined with the eardrum-to-stapes area ratio of about , the total pressure-amplification factor from air-side eardrum to oval-window stapes is roughly — close to the impedance ratio that needs to be matched between air and cochlear fluid.
This is the operative argument in Hearing Ch 3.3.
Example 2: pressure as the rate of momentum delivery
The kinetic-theory derivation of pressure (kinetic theory chapter) is exactly the impulse–momentum theorem applied to a molecular collision. A molecule of mass hitting the wall with -velocity and bouncing back elastically delivers an impulse to the wall. The number of such molecules striking per unit area per unit time is , so the pressure — the time-averaged rate of impulse delivery per unit area — is
The factor of two is from the elastic bounce (); the factor of one-half is from the half of molecules moving toward the wall. This is the same elastic-collision idealisation visualised in the chapter’s collision visualizer — see Sound Ch 1.2.
Example 3: Euler’s equation as Newton on a slab
For a small slab of fluid with area and thickness , the net force from pressure on the two faces is . Newton’s second law with gives
The vector generalisation is Euler’s equation, . This is the most direct application of Newton’s second law to a continuum — every step of the derivation is a free-body diagram on a small fluid element, exactly as the chapter advocates. See Sound Ch 4.3 and the fluid-mechanics chapter for the full treatment.
Example 4: the Rayleigh–Plesset equation
The radial dynamics of a spherical bubble are derived by integrating Newton’s second law (Euler’s equation in spherical coordinates) from the bubble wall out to infinity, accounting for the surface-tension pressure at the wall and the polytropic gas inside. The result is
The left side is the inertia of the radially-flowing liquid (a continuum Newton’s second law in spherical symmetry); the right side is the net of internal gas pressure, ambient pressure, Young–Laplace term, and viscous-stress damping. See Cavitation Ch 3.1.
Example 5: acoustic energy density
In a plane sound wave, the kinetic energy density is and the potential energy density (the work done compressing the fluid against its bulk modulus) is . On time-average they are equal — acoustic equipartition — and their sum is the total energy density that the waves chapter uses to define intensity. The argument is the work–energy theorem applied to an oscillating fluid element: integrate the work done by pressure over the compression cycle and verify it stores in the elastic restoring force on the way in and releases it on the way out. See Sound Ch 5.2.
Cross-book backlinks
- Sound Ch 1.2 — kinetic theory: pressure as molecular momentum delivery.
- Sound Ch 4.3 — Euler’s equation: Newton’s second law in a fluid.
- Sound Ch 5.2 — acoustic energy density: kinetic + potential bookkeeping.
- Hearing Ch 3.3 — the ossicular solution: lever principle in the middle ear.
- Cavitation Ch 3.1 — Rayleigh–Plesset derivation: momentum balance on a spherical bubble.