Fluid Mechanics & Hydraulics — Formula Sheet
Every key formula from Civil_41 to Civil_50 — organised by topic for rapid GATE CE revision
Last Updated: April 2026
- This sheet covers all 10 topic pages of the Fluid Mechanics & Hydraulics cluster (Civil_41–Civil_50).
- Each section matches one topic page — click any topic link to go to the full explanation.
- Standard values used throughout: ρwater = 1000 kg/m³; γwater = 9810 N/m³; g = 9.81 m/s²; patm = 101.325 kPa = 10.33 m of water.
- Manning’s n: concrete pipe/channel = 0.013; earthen canal = 0.025.
- GATE CE highest-yield formulas (starred ⭐): Darcy-Weisbach, Manning’s equation, hydraulic jump sequent depth, Bernoulli + continuity, critical depth, and weir discharge.
1. Fluid Properties — Civil_41
Mass density: ρ = m/V [kg/m³]
Specific weight: γ = ρg [N/m³]; γwater = 9810 N/m³
Specific gravity: SG = ρfluid/ρwater = γfluid/γwater (dimensionless)
⭐ Newton’s law of viscosity: τ = μ (du/dy) [Pa]
Kinematic viscosity: ν = μ/ρ [m²/s]
Units: μ in Pa·s; 1 Poise = 0.1 Pa·s; ν in m²/s; 1 Stoke = 10⁻⁴ m²/s
Temperature effect: Liquids → μ decreases with ↑T; Gases → μ increases with ↑T
Surface tension — pressure inside droplet: Δp = 4σ/d
Pressure inside soap bubble (2 surfaces): Δp = 8σ/d
Pressure inside liquid jet: Δp = 2σ/d
Capillary rise/depression: h = 4σ cosθ/(ρgd)
Water–glass: θ ≈ 0° → capillary rise; Mercury–glass: θ ≈ 135° → capillary depression
Bulk modulus: K = –V(dp/dV) = ρ(dp/dρ) [Pa]
Water: K ≈ 2.1 GPa; Speed of sound: c = √(K/ρ) ≈ 1450 m/s in water
2. Hydrostatics — Civil_42
Hydrostatic pressure at depth h: p = ρgh = γh [Pa]
Pressure head: h = p/(ρg) = p/γ [m of fluid]
Pascal’s law: Pressure at a point acts equally in all directions in a static fluid.
pabs = patm + pgauge
⭐ Total hydrostatic force on a plane surface:
F = ρg Ȳ A = γ Ȳ A [N]
where Ȳ = vertical depth of centroid; A = surface area
⭐ Centre of pressure depth:
hcp = Ȳ + IG/(AȲ) [hcp > Ȳ always]
IG for rectangle (b×d): bd³/12; Circle (D): πD⁴/64
Curved surface forces:
FH = force on vertical projection of curved surface
FV = weight of fluid above curved surface (real or imaginary)
Fresultant = √(FH² + FV²)
⭐ Buoyant force (Archimedes): FB = ρf g Vsubmerged
Floating body: Vsub/Vtotal = ρbody/ρfluid
Metacentric height: GM = BM – BG; BM = IWL/Vs
GM > 0 → stable; GM = 0 → neutral; GM < 0 → unstable
U-tube manometer (gauge pressure):
pA = ρm g hm – ρf g hf
Differential manometer:
pA – pB = hm(ρm – ρf)g
Mercury–water: Δp = 12.6 × x × ρw × g (x = manometer deflection in m)
3. Bernoulli’s Equation — Civil_43
⭐ Bernoulli’s equation (ideal flow along streamline):
p₁/(ρg) + V₁²/(2g) + z₁ = p₂/(ρg) + V₂²/(2g) + z₂
or: p + ½ρV² + ρgz = constant [Pa]
Total head H = p/(ρg) + V²/(2g) + z = constant [m]
⭐ Continuity equation (incompressible): A₁V₁ = A₂V₂ = Q
For circular pipe: Q = (πD²/4) × V
⭐ Modified Bernoulli (with losses and pump/turbine):
p₁/(ρg) + V₁²/(2g) + z₁ + hp = p₂/(ρg) + V₂²/(2g) + z₂ + ht + hL
Pump power: P = ρgQhp/η [W]
Turbine power: P = ρgQht × η [W]
Pitot tube: V = Cv√(2gΔh) where Δh = stagnation head – static head
Torricelli’s theorem (orifice in tank): Vth = √(2gH)
Siphon maximum crest height (approx): zc,max ≈ 7–8 m (practical; 10.33 m theoretical)
HGL = p/(ρg) + z; EGL = HGL + V²/(2g); EGL – HGL = V²/(2g)
4. Flow Measurement — Civil_44
⭐ Venturimeter / Orifice meter actual discharge:
Q = Cd × (A₁A₂/√(A₁² – A₂²)) × √(2gΔh)
Differential head from manometer: Δh = x[(ρm/ρf) – 1] (mercury–water: Δh = 12.6x)
Cd: venturimeter 0.96–0.99; orifice meter 0.61–0.65; flow nozzle 0.95–0.99
Orifice in tank: Q = Cd × A₀ × √(2gH)
Cd = Cv × Cc; Cv ≈ 0.97–0.99; Cc ≈ 0.61–0.64
Cv from jet trajectory: Cv = x/(2√(yH))
Cd (sharp-edged orifice) ≈ 0.62; Cd (external mouthpiece) ≈ 0.82
⭐ Rectangular notch/weir:
Q = (2/3) Cd L √(2g) H3/2 = 1.838 L H3/2 (Francis, Cd = 0.623)
Francis end contraction correction: Q = 1.838 (L – 0.1nH) H3/2
n = 0 (suppressed); n = 1 (one contraction); n = 2 (both ends free)
⭐ Triangular (V-notch) weir:
Q = (8/15) Cd tan(θ/2) √(2g) H5/2
90° V-notch (Cd = 0.611): Q = 1.417 H5/2 (Thompson’s formula)
Broad-crested weir: Q = Cd × 1.705 × L × H3/2 (Cd ≈ 0.848)
Cipolletti (trapezoidal, side slopes 1:4): Q = 1.859 L H3/2
5. Pipe Flow & Head Losses — Civil_45
⭐ Darcy-Weisbach equation (major friction loss):
hf = fLV²/(2gD) = 8fLQ²/(π²gD⁵)
Laminar flow: f = 64/Re
Turbulent smooth pipe (Blasius, Re < 10⁵): f = 0.316 Re–0.25
Swamee-Jain (explicit): f = 0.25/[log(ε/3.7D + 5.74/Re0.9)]²
Hagen-Poiseuille (laminar only):
Q = πD⁴Δp/(128μL); hf = 32μLV/(γD²) = 128μLQ/(πγD⁴)
Velocity profile: u(r) = Vmax[1–(r/R)²]; Vmax = 2Vavg
Minor losses: hm = K V²/(2g)
Sharp entry: K = 0.5; Exit (any): K = 1.0; Globe valve (open): K = 4–10; 90° elbow: K ≈ 0.9
⭐ Sudden expansion (Borda-Carnot): he = (V₁–V₂)²/(2g)
⭐ Pipes in series: Q same; Htotal = Σhfi
H = Q² × Σ(8fiLi/π²gDi⁵)
⭐ Pipes in parallel: hf1 = hf2; Qtotal = ΣQi
Equivalent pipe (series, same f): Leq/Deq⁵ = Σ(Li/Di⁵)
Water hammer (Joukowsky): Δp = ρcΔV; Δh = cΔV/g
Wave speed: c ≈ 900–1400 m/s (steel pipe); ≈ 300–500 m/s (PVC/HDPE)
Critical closure time: Tc = 2L/c; if tclosure < Tc → sudden closure
6. Reynolds Number — Civil_46
⭐ Reynolds number: Re = ρVD/μ = VD/ν = 4Q/(πDν)
Flow regimes (pipe): Re < 2000 → Laminar; 2000–4000 → Transitional; Re > 4000 → Turbulent
Critical velocity: Vc,laminar = 2000ν/D; Vc,turbulent = 4000ν/D
Laminar velocity profile: u(r) = Vmax[1–(r/R)²]; Vmax = 2Vavg
Wall shear stress: τw = 8μV/D = 4τ̄ (average is half wall value)
Turbulent (1/7 power law): u/Vmax = (y/R)1/7; Vavg/Vmax ≈ 0.817
Entry length — Laminar: Le/D ≈ 0.06 Re; Turbulent: Le/D ≈ 4.4 Re1/6
Hydraulic diameter (non-circular): Dh = 4A/P
Open channel Re: Re = VR/ν (R = hydraulic radius); critical Re ≈ 500–2000
7. Open Channel Flow — Civil_47
⭐ Manning’s equation: V = (1/n) R2/3 S1/2
Q = (1/n) A R2/3 S1/2
nconcrete = 0.013; nearthen canal = 0.025; nnatural river = 0.025–0.050
Chezy’s formula: V = C√(RS); C = R1/6/n
Hydraulic radius: R = A/P (NOT pipe radius)
Section formulas:
Rectangle (b, y): A = by; P = b+2y; R = by/(b+2y)
Trapezoid (b, z, y): A = (b+zy)y; P = b+2y√(1+z²); R = A/P
Full circle (D): A = πD²/4; P = πD; R = D/4
⭐ Most economical sections:
Rectangle: b = 2y → R = y/2
Trapezoid (z given): b = 2y(√(1+z²)–z) → R = y/2 (inscribed semi-circle)
Best trapezoid (z free): z = 1/√3 (half-hexagon, 60° sides)
All best sections: R = y/2
⭐ Froude number: Fr = V/√(gD) = V/√(gy) (rectangular)
Fr < 1: subcritical; Fr = 1: critical; Fr > 1: supercritical
Critical depth (rectangular): yc = (q²/g)1/3; q = Q/b
Critical velocity: Vc = √(gyc)
Critical slope (wide channel): Sc = gn²/yc1/3
GVF equation: dy/dx = (S₀–Sf)/(1–Fr²)
M1: y > yn > yc (mild slope; backwater behind dam)
M2: yn > y > yc (mild; drawdown)
M3: y < yc < yn (mild; below sluice gate)
Circular pipe — maximum flow: occurs at y/D ≈ 0.94; Qmax/Qfull ≈ 1.076
Maximum velocity at y/D ≈ 0.81; Vmax/Vfull ≈ 1.14
8. Specific Energy & Hydraulic Jump — Civil_48
⭐ Specific energy: E = y + V²/(2g) = y + q²/(2gy²) [m]
At critical flow: Emin = (3/2)yc; yc = (2/3)Emin
Velocity head at critical depth: Vc²/(2g) = yc/2
General critical condition (any section): Q²/g = A³/T
Hump analysis:
E over hump = E₁ – Δz (neglecting friction)
Max hump height without choking: Δzmax = E₁ – Emin = E₁ – (3/2)yc
If Δz > Δzmax: flow choked; critical flow at hump; upstream depth increases
⭐ Hydraulic jump sequent depth ratio:
y₂/y₁ = ½[√(1 + 8Fr₁²) – 1]
y₁ = upstream (supercritical) depth; y₂ = downstream (subcritical) sequent depth
Fr₁ > 1 always; y₂ > y₁ always
⭐ Energy dissipated in hydraulic jump:
ΔE = (y₂ – y₁)³/(4y₁y₂) [m]
Power dissipated: P = ρgQΔE [W]
Height of jump: hj = y₂ – y₁
Jump length (approximate): Lj ≈ 5–7 × y₂
| Jump Type | Fr₁ | y₂/y₁ | ΔE/E₁ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Undular | 1.0–1.7 | 1.0–2.0 | 0–5% |
| Weak | 1.7–2.5 | 2.0–3.1 | 5–18% |
| Oscillating | 2.5–4.5 | 3.1–5.9 | 18–45% |
| Steady (ideal stilling basin) | 4.5–9.0 | 5.9–12.0 | 45–70% |
| Strong | >9.0 | >12.0 | 70–85% |
9. Hydraulic Machines — Civil_49
⭐ Euler’s turbomachinery equation:
H = (u₂Vw2 – u₁Vw1)/g (pump, no pre-swirl: H = u₂Vw2/g)
H = (u₁Vw1 – u₂Vw2)/g (turbine)
u = ωr = πDN/60 (peripheral blade velocity)
Pump power & efficiency:
Power to fluid: Pfluid = ρgQHm
Overall efficiency: η = ρgQHm/Pinput
Pinput = ρgQHm/η
ηmanometric = Hm/HEuler = gHm/(u₂Vw2)
⭐ Specific speed — Pump: Ns = NQ1/2/H3/4
⭐ Specific speed — Turbine: Ns = N√P/H5/4
Pelton: Ns = 4–30; Francis: Ns = 51–255; Kaplan: Ns = 255–860 (rpm, kW, m)
⭐ Affinity laws (same impeller, speed change):
Q₂/Q₁ = N₂/N₁; H₂/H₁ = (N₂/N₁)²; P₂/P₁ = (N₂/N₁)³
Size change (same speed):
Q ∝ D³; H ∝ D²; P ∝ D⁵
Pelton wheel hydraulic efficiency:
ηh = 2(u/V₁)(1 + k cosβ)(1 – u/V₁)
Maximum at u/V₁ = 0.5; ηh,max = (1 + k cosβ)/2
Jet velocity: V₁ = Cv√(2gH); Cv ≈ 0.97–0.99
⭐ Cavitation / NPSH:
NPSHavailable = Hatm – Hv – Hs – hf,suction
Condition: NPSHavail > NPSHrequired
Hs,max ≈ 10.33 – Hv – NPSHreq – hf,s
Thoma’s cavitation number: σ = (Hatm – Hs – Hv)/H
No cavitation if: σ > σc (critical Thoma number from tests)
Reciprocating pump discharge:
Single-acting: Qth = A × L × N/60
Double-acting: Qth = (2A – Arod) × L × N/60
Qact = ηv × Qth
10. Dimensional Analysis — Civil_50
⭐ Buckingham Pi theorem: Number of Pi terms = n – m
n = total variables; m = fundamental dimensions (usually 3: M, L, T)
F(π₁, π₂, …, πn–m) = 0
Rules for repeating variables: Choose m variables; span all m dimensions; exclude dependent variable; avoid same-dimension pairs.
⭐ Key dimensionless numbers:
Reynolds: Re = ρVL/μ = VL/ν (inertia/viscous)
Froude: Fr = V/√(gL) (inertia/gravity)
Euler: Eu = Δp/(ρV²) (pressure/inertia)
Weber: We = ρV²L/σ (inertia/surface tension)
Mach: Ma = V/c (inertia/elastic)
Strouhal: St = fL/V (unsteady/convective inertia)
⭐ Froude model law (open channel, same fluid, gr=1):
Vr = √Lr; Tr = √Lr; Qr = Lr5/2; Fr = Lr³; Pr = Lr7/2
Reynolds model law (same fluid): Vr = 1/Lr
Dimensions of key quantities (MLT system):
Force: MLT⁻²; Pressure: ML⁻¹T⁻²; Energy: ML²T⁻²; Power: ML²T⁻³
Viscosity μ: ML⁻¹T⁻¹; Kinematic viscosity ν: L²T⁻¹
Surface tension σ: MT⁻²; Bulk modulus K: ML⁻¹T⁻²
11. Standard Values Quick Reference
| Property | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ρwater at 4 °C | 1000 kg/m³ | Maximum density; use for GATE unless temp specified |
| ρwater at 20 °C | 998.2 kg/m³ | Room temperature standard |
| γwater | 9810 N/m³ = 9.81 kN/m³ | = ρg = 1000 × 9.81 |
| μwater at 20 °C | 1.002 × 10⁻³ Pa·s | ≈ 1 cP |
| νwater at 20 °C | 1.004 × 10⁻⁶ m²/s | ≈ 1 cSt |
| ρmercury | 13,600 kg/m³ | SG = 13.6 |
| ρair at STP | 1.2 kg/m³ | Standard conditions |
| g | 9.81 m/s² | Standard gravitational acceleration |
| patm | 101,325 Pa = 101.325 kPa | = 10.33 m of water = 760 mm Hg |
| σwater at 20 °C | 0.0728 N/m | Surface tension (water–air interface) |
| Kwater | 2.1 × 10⁹ Pa = 2.1 GPa | Bulk modulus |
| cwater | ≈ 1450 m/s | Speed of sound |
| pv,water at 20 °C | 2.337 kPa | Vapour pressure (absolute) |
| Manning’s n — concrete pipe | 0.013 | IS 458 standard |
| Manning’s n — earthen canal | 0.025 | Typical irrigation canal |
| Cd — venturimeter | 0.96–0.99 | — |
| Cd — orifice meter | 0.61–0.65 | Sharp-edged |
| Cd — sharp-crested weir | 0.611–0.623 | Francis: 0.623 |
| Cd — 90° V-notch | 0.611 | Thompson’s formula constant |
GATE CE — Fluid Mechanics Formula Priority Summary
| Rank | Formula / Concept | Typical Marks |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bernoulli + Continuity (venturimeter, pitot, tapering pipe) | 2–3 |
| 2 | Darcy-Weisbach + pipe networks (series/parallel) | 2–3 |
| 3 | Manning’s equation (trapezoidal canal, rectangular channel) | 1–2 |
| 4 | Hydraulic jump sequent depth ratio y₂/y₁ | 1–2 |
| 5 | Hydrostatics (submerged surfaces, manometers, buoyancy) | 1–2 |
| 6 | Weir discharge (rectangular notch, V-notch) | 1 |
| 7 | Dimensional analysis (number of Pi terms) | 1 |
| 8 | Specific speed and pump/turbine type identification | 0–1 |