Physics CAPA Problem..Please help!?

Blood flows in an aorta of radius 4.00mm at 25.0cm/s. Calculate the volume flow rate.

Although the cross-sectional area of a capillary is much smaller than that of the aorta, there are many capillaries, so their total cross-sectional area is much larger. If all the blood from the aorta flows into the capillaries and the speed of flow through the capillaries is 1.05mm/s, calculate the total cross-sectional area of the capillaries.

Comments

  • It is a bit like calculating the volume of a cylinder.

    The cross-sectional area is π * r²

    A = 3.14 * (0.4cm)² = 0.504 cm²

    In one second, the flow moves 25 cm

    so the volume per second is 0.504 * 25 = 12.60 cm³/sec

    In capillaries, speed = 1.05 mm/s = 0.105 cm/s

    Volumetric flow rate / speed gives cross-sectional area:

    12.60 / 0.105 = 120 cm²

    Double check all this because I already found I had made one mistake.

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