In physics, Torricelli's equation, or Torricelli's formula, is an equation created by Evangelista Torricelli to find the final velocity of a moving object with constant acceleration along an axis (for example, the x axis) without having a known time interval.
The equation itself is:[1]
where
- is the object's final velocity along the x axis on which the acceleration is constant.
- is the object's initial velocity along the x axis.
- is the object's acceleration along the x axis, which is given as a constant.
- is the object's change in position along the x axis, also called displacement.
In this and all subsequent equations in this article, the subscript (as in ) is implied, but is not expressed explicitly for clarity in presenting the equations.
This equation is valid along any axis on which the acceleration is constant.
Without differentials and integration
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Begin with the following relations for the case of uniform acceleration:
| | (1) |
| | (2) |
Take (1), and multiply both sides with acceleration
| | (3) |
The following rearrangement of the right hand side makes it easier to recognize the coming substitution:
| | (4) |
Use (2) to substitute the product :
| | (5) |
Work out the multiplications:
| | (6) |
The crossterms drop away against each other, leaving only squared terms:
| | (7) |
(7) rearranges to the form of Torricelli's equation as presented at the start of the article:
| | (8) |
Using differentials and integration
[edit]
Begin with the definition of acceleration as the derivative of the velocity:
Now, we multiply both sides by the velocity :
In the left hand side we can rewrite the velocity as the derivative of the position:
Multiplying both sides by gets us the following:
Rearranging the terms in a more traditional manner:
Integrating both sides from the initial instant with position and velocity to the final instant with position and velocity :
Since the acceleration is constant, we can factor it out of the integration:
Solving the integration:
The factor is the displacement :
From the work-energy theorem
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The work-energy theorem states that
which, from Newton's second law of motion, becomes