I have a question that has been bugging for quite some time now. The quesiton is from a textbook by Bostock and Chandler on Mechanics.
It says:
Water is being raised by a pump from a storage tank $4m$ below ground and delivered at $8 m/s$ through a pipe at ground level. If the cross sectional area of the pipe is $0.12m^2$ find the work done per second by the pump (1 cubic metre of water has a mass of 1000kg).
The answer they got was $68352 \ J/s$. What's bugging me is that I think they considered the water being pumped as a single rigid body, since when calculating the P.E of the water they did not consider the distance moved by each single layer of water like the way it is calculated from the calculus perspective, and I'm confused, as I thought that non-rigid bodies like water require only calculus for questions like these (Which is which?) and I'm kind of wondering from where the water gets the energy to move in a horizonal path in the pipe at ground level. I first thought that there was a force acting horizontally, but I no longer think that is true; or is it? Sorry for the useless information. Help will be greatly appreaciated.