JumbleDuck
Well-Known Member
1) both conservation laws (energy and momentum) are, of course, always valid (until experimentally proved wrong...) but quite independent. Somehow the conservation of momentum is easier to observe and deal with because its microscopic component, on the average, can be neglected. This is not true for the conservation of energy, where its microscopic part can be - and most of the times is indeed - relevant and can be tricky to be dealt with.
Agreed. The big difference in fluid is that conservation of momentum works fine on systems with turbulence in them (as long as you have a good idea what is happening at the boundaries) but conservation of energy doesn't, or at least can't usefully be applied, because there are unknown mechanical -> heat conversions. If I had a pound for every student who tried to apply the Steady Flow Energy Equation through turbulence or across streamlines I'd have at least a fiver.
2) in your case (2) you should specify that the wind "does no work" on the stationary sail but indeed does work on other "things" (maybe even on the sail cloth fibers themselves.... Moreover the wind DOES loose momentum hitting the sail the same way Easterly Winds loose momentum by blowing westward and give it back it to the Earth...
And again, of course. In fluids, forces ALWAYS result from (or cause) momentum change.
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