Horizontal distance covered by the jet of liquid If h is height of the orifice above the ground and H is height of the liquid column from the ground (height of liquid's surface), then the horizontal distance covered by the jet of liquid to reach the same level as the base of the liquid column can be easily derived. Since h be the vertical height traveled by a particle of
jet stream, we have from the laws of falling bodies :h = \frac{1}{2} gt^2 \quad \Rightarrow \quad t = \sqrt{\frac{2h}{g}}, where t is the time taken by the jet particle to fall from the orifice to the ground. If the horizontal efflux velocity is v, then the horizontal distance traveled by the jet particle during the time duration t is :D = vt = v \sqrt{\frac{2h}{g}}. Since the water level is H-h above the orifice, the horizontal efflux velocity v = \sqrt{2g(H-h)}, as given by Torricelli's law. Thus, we have from the two equations :D = 2 \sqrt{h(H-h)}. The location of the orifice that yields the maximum horizontal range is obtained by differentiating the above equation for D with respect to h, and solving dD/dh = 0. Here we have :\frac{dD}{dh} = \frac{H - 2h}{\sqrt{h(H-h)}}. Solving dD/dh = 0, we obtain :h^* = \frac{H}{2}, and the maximum range :D_{\max} = H.
Clepsydra problem A
clepsydra is a clock that measures time by the flow of water. It consists of a pot with a small hole at the bottom through which the water can escape. The amount of escaping water gives the measure of time. As given by the Torricelli's law, the rate of efflux through the hole depends on the height of the water; and as the water level diminishes, the discharge is not uniform. A simple solution is to keep the height of the water constant. This can be attained by letting a constant stream of water flow into the vessel, the overflow of which is allowed to escape from the top, from another hole. Thus having a constant height, the discharging water from the bottom can be collected in another cylindrical vessel with uniform graduation to measure time. This is an inflow clepsydra. Alternatively, by carefully selecting the shape of the vessel, the water level in the vessel can be made to decrease at constant rate. By measuring the level of water remaining in the vessel, the time can be measured with uniform graduation. This is an example of outflow clepsydra. Since the water outflow rate is higher when the water level is higher (due to more pressure), the fluid's volume should be more than a simple cylinder when the water level is high. That is, the radius should be larger when the water level is higher. Let the radius r increase with the height of the water level h above the exit hole of area a. That is, r = f(h). We want to find the radius such that the water level has a constant rate of decrease, i.e. dh/dt = c. At a given water level h, the water surface area is A = \pi r^2 . The instantaneous rate of change in water volume is :\frac{dV}{dt} = A \frac{dh}{dt} = \pi r^2 c. From Torricelli's law, the rate of outflow is :\frac{dV}{dt} = A_A v = A_A \sqrt{2gh}, From these two equations, : \begin{align} A_A \sqrt{2gh} &= \pi r^2 c \\ \Rightarrow \quad h &= \frac{\pi^2 c^2}{2g A_A^2} r^4. \end{align} Thus, the radius of the container should change in proportion to the quartic root of its height, r \propto \sqrt[4]{h}. Likewise, if the shape of the vessel of the outflow clepsydra cannot be modified according to the above specification, then we need to use non-uniform graduation to measure time. The emptying time formula above tells us the time should be calibrated as the square root of the discharged water height, T \propto \sqrt{h}. More precisely, : \Delta t = \frac{A}{A_A} \sqrt{\frac{2}{g}} (\sqrt{h_1} - \sqrt{h_2}) where \Delta t is the time taken by the water level to fall from the height of h_1 to height of h_2. ==Torricelli's original derivation==