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kellyneedshelp
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Any ideas how to start this problem (formulas or anything)?
Just after its completion, the glass-walled skyscraper known as the John Hancock tower in Boston (see Figure P.64) was faced with an embarrassing problem: its windows kept falling out on windy days! The building soon became known as the "plywood palace," since at one point plywood covered a significant percentage of the exterior of the building as a temporary replacement for the lost windows. Needless to say, the 1.89 m x 2.86 m glass panes were quite a safety hazard as they cascaded to the pavement below. Fortunately, no casualties resulted from the flying panes. If a wind with a speed of 59.0 km/h is blowing parallel to the face of one of the windows, what is the magnitude of the net outward force on each window caused by the pressure difference between the inside and outside of the building?
I have no clue how to calculate the pressure differences or the force that would be needed to knock the windows out.
Just after its completion, the glass-walled skyscraper known as the John Hancock tower in Boston (see Figure P.64) was faced with an embarrassing problem: its windows kept falling out on windy days! The building soon became known as the "plywood palace," since at one point plywood covered a significant percentage of the exterior of the building as a temporary replacement for the lost windows. Needless to say, the 1.89 m x 2.86 m glass panes were quite a safety hazard as they cascaded to the pavement below. Fortunately, no casualties resulted from the flying panes. If a wind with a speed of 59.0 km/h is blowing parallel to the face of one of the windows, what is the magnitude of the net outward force on each window caused by the pressure difference between the inside and outside of the building?
I have no clue how to calculate the pressure differences or the force that would be needed to knock the windows out.