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Physics · 1.8 Pressure · Paper 6 practical

Pressure in Liquids. Dive in.

Move a pressure probe through a liquid and see how pressure depends on depth and density. Verify p = hρg: pressure increases with depth, with density, and acts equally in all directions.

0625 Topic 1.8 — Pressure p = hρg Paper 6 — ATP
Drag the probe up and down in the liquid to read the pressure at different depths.

Drag the probe; or use the depth slider. Space record · R reset.

Variables

20.0
9.81

Live readouts

Depth h
0.20 m
Density ρ
1000 kg/m³
Pressure p = hρg
1962 Pa
Manometer height
20.0 cm
Pressure increases linearly with depth and acts equally in all directions at a point.

Trial data — p vs h

Move the probe to five depths and record the pressure.

p vs h — gradient = ρg

📋 Method (Cambridge ATP procedure)
  1. Connect a pressure probe (or a thistle funnel with rubber sheet) to a U-tube manometer.
  2. Lower the probe to a measured depth h in the liquid; record the manometer height difference (∝ pressure).
  3. Repeat at five depths; plot pressure against depth.
  4. Rotate the probe at one depth to show pressure is the same in all directions.

Analytical control: plot p against h. A straight line through the origin confirms p ∝ h; gradient = ρg.

⚠ Sources of error & precautions
  • Measure depth to the centre of the probe, viewing perpendicular to the scale (parallax).
  • Air bubbles in the tube give false manometer readings — remove them first.
  • Keep the liquid temperature (and so density) constant.
🎯 Syllabus reference (0625)
  • 1.8 Pressure — define pressure p = F/A; recall and use p = hρg for the pressure due to a liquid column; describe how pressure in a liquid increases with depth and acts equally in all directions.

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