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30 points

How does that siphon work? I would think they would need a pump of some kind, even if it’s just a bunch of Roman workers/slaves turning an Archimedes Screw, to get the water to go uphill.

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50 points

Same way a fuel siphon works, as long as the opening is below the inlet, and the rest of the tube is full and sealed, the water will flow.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siphon

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8 points

How did the Romans seal that apparatus? Cement? Even that would fail rather quickly

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9 points

Lead Pipes: http://www.romanaqueducts.info/siphons/siphons.htm

Also some terracotta pipes, but not really clear how its sealed.

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7 points

It never would have occurred to me that siphons work that way, too!

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3 points

By why did they even need one here though?

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14 points
*

Because it’s simpler to build siphons through large valleys instead of 100 meter high 10 kilometer long aqueducts.

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8 points

For demonstration purposes only.

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4 points

Valley was too deep for the aqueduct but they didn’t want to make the drawing taller just for that

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2 points

Yeah, but the water pipe goes back up meaning that there is near equal pressure on either side of the U-Siphon, right? Kind of negates the siphon, in a sense?

I’m no fluid dynamics expert. Just a casual Joe.

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5 points

Its a bad diagram, the other side needs to be lower :/

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14 points

If you’ve ever used a siphon to drain a fish tank, it’s a similar concept. I believe the entrance is a bit higher than the exit, so I guess gravity and water pressure?

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4 points

Not disagreeing with you there, but if you’ve siphoned something you’ve probably done it with a polymer, how the heck were the Romans doing it? You can’t get intestines sealed together tightly enough back in those days.

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9 points
*

The Romans would often use lead or clay pipes with either dirt or concrete packed around them to make a solid seal that would resist the water pressure and not burst the pipe like a ripe fruit.

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3 points

It needs to be water pressure because atmospheric pressure can’t lift water more than about 10 metres.

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16 points

The “pump” is the higher elevation at the source.

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