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Fluid dynamics

In physics, physical chemistry and engineering, fluid dynamics is a subdiscipline of fluid mechanics that describes the flow of fluidsliquids and gases. It has several subdisciplines, including aerodynamics (the study of air and other gases in motion) and hydrodynamics (the study of liquids in motion). Fluid dynamics has a wide range of applications, including calculating forces and moments on aircraft, determining the mass flow rate of petroleum through pipelines, predicting weather patterns, understanding nebulae in interstellar space and modelling fission weapon detonation.

Typical aerodynamic teardrop shape, assuming a viscous medium passing from left to right, the diagram shows the pressure distribution as the thickness of the black line and shows the velocity in the boundary layer as the violet triangles. The green vortex generators prompt the transition to turbulent flow and prevent back-flow also called flow separation from the high-pressure region in the back. The surface in front is as smooth as possible or even employs shark-like skin, as any turbulence here increases the energy of the airflow. The truncation on the right, known as a Kammback, also prevents backflow from the high-pressure region in the back across the spoilers to the convergent part.

Fluid dynamics offers a systematic structure—which underlies these practical disciplines—that embraces empirical and semi-empirical laws derived from flow measurement and used to solve practical problems. The solution to a fluid dynamics problem typically involves the calculation of various properties of the fluid, such as flow velocity, pressure, density, and temperature, as functions of space and time.

Before the twentieth century, hydrodynamics was synonymous with fluid dynamics. This is still reflected in names of some fluid dynamics topics, like magnetohydrodynamics and hydrodynamic stability, both of which can also be applied to gases.[1]

Equations

The foundational axioms of fluid dynamics are the conservation laws, specifically, conservation of mass, conservation of linear momentum, and conservation of energy (also known as the First Law of Thermodynamics). These are based on classical mechanics and are modified in quantum mechanics and general relativity. They are expressed using the Reynolds transport theorem.

In addition to the above, fluids are assumed to obey the continuum assumption. Fluids are composed of molecules that collide with one another and solid objects. However, the continuum assumption assumes that fluids are continuous, rather than discrete. Consequently, it is assumed that properties such as density, pressure, temperature, and flow velocity are well-defined at infinitesimally small points in space and vary continuously from one point to another. The fact that the fluid is made up of discrete molecules is ignored.

For fluids that are sufficiently dense to be a continuum, do not contain ionized species, and have flow velocities that are small in relation to the speed of light, the momentum equations for Newtonian fluids are the Navier–Stokes equations—which is a non-linear set of differential equations that describes the flow of a fluid whose stress depends linearly on flow velocity gradients and pressure. The unsimplified equations do not have a general closed-form solution, so they are primarily of use in computational fluid dynamics. The equations can be simplified in several ways, all of which make them easier to solve. Some of the simplifications allow some simple fluid dynamics problems to be solved in closed form.[citation needed]

In addition to the mass, momentum, and energy conservation equations, a thermodynamic equation of state that gives the pressure as a function of other thermodynamic variables is required to completely describe the problem. An example of this would be the perfect gas equation of state:

 

where p is pressure, ρ is density, and T is the absolute temperature, while Ru is the gas constant and M is molar mass for a particular gas. A constitutive relation may also be useful.

Conservation laws

Three conservation laws are used to solve fluid dynamics problems, and may be written in integral or differential form. The conservation laws may be applied to a region of the flow called a control volume. A control volume is a discrete volume in space through which fluid is assumed to flow. The integral formulations of the conservation laws are used to describe the change of mass, momentum, or energy within the control volume. Differential formulations of the conservation laws apply Stokes' theorem to yield an expression that may be interpreted as the integral form of the law applied to an infinitesimally small volume (at a point) within the flow.

Mass continuity (conservation of mass)
The rate of change of fluid mass inside a control volume must be equal to the net rate of fluid flow into the volume. Physically, this statement requires that mass is neither created nor destroyed in the control volume,[2] and can be translated into the integral form of the continuity equation:
      
Above, ρ is the fluid density, u is the flow velocity vector, and t is time. The left-hand side of the above expression is the rate of increase of mass within the volume and contains a triple integral over the control volume, whereas the right-hand side contains an integration over the surface of the control volume of mass convected into the system. Mass flow into the system is accounted as positive, and since the normal vector to the surface is opposite to the sense of flow into the system the term is negated. The differential form of the continuity equation is, by the divergence theorem:
 
Conservation of momentum
Newton's second law of motion applied to a control volume, is a statement that any change in momentum of the fluid within that control volume will be due to the net flow of momentum into the volume and the action of external forces acting on the fluid within the volume.
             

In the above integral formulation of this equation, the term on the left is the net change of momentum within the volume. The first term on the right is the net rate at which momentum is convected into the volume. The second term on the right is the force due to pressure on the volume's surfaces. The first two terms on the right are negated since momentum entering the system is accounted as positive, and the normal is opposite the direction of the velocity u and pressure forces. The third term on the right is the net acceleration of the mass within the volume due to any body forces (here represented by fbody). Surface forces, such as viscous forces, are represented by Fsurf, the net force due to shear forces acting on the volume surface. The momentum balance can also be written for a moving control volume.[3]

The following is the differential form of the momentum conservation equation. Here, the volume is reduced to an infinitesimally small point, and both surface and body forces are accounted for in one total force, F. For example, F may be expanded into an expression for the frictional and gravitational forces acting at a point in a flow.

 
In aerodynamics, air is assumed to be a Newtonian fluid, which posits a linear relationship between the shear stress (due to internal friction forces) and the rate of strain of the fluid. The equation above is a vector equation in a three-dimensional flow, but it can be expressed as three scalar equations in three coordinate directions. The conservation of momentum equations for the compressible, viscous flow case is called the Navier–Stokes equations.[2]
Conservation of energy
Although energy can be converted from one form to another, the total energy in a closed system remains constant.
 
Above, h is the specific enthalpy, k is the thermal conductivity of the fluid, T is temperature, and Φ is the viscous dissipation function. The viscous dissipation function governs the rate at which the mechanical energy of the flow is converted to heat. The second law of thermodynamics requires that the dissipation term is always positive: viscosity cannot create energy within the control volume.[4] The expression on the left side is a material derivative.

Classifications

Compressible versus incompressible flow

All fluids are compressible to an extent; that is, changes in pressure or temperature cause changes in density. However, in many situations the changes in pressure and temperature are sufficiently small that the changes in density are negligible. In this case the flow can be modelled as an incompressible flow. Otherwise the more general compressible flow equations must be used.

Mathematically, incompressibility is expressed by saying that the density ρ of a fluid parcel does not change as it moves in the flow field, that is,

 

where D/Dt is the material derivative, which is the sum of local and convective derivatives. This additional constraint simplifies the governing equations, especially in the case when the fluid has a uniform density.

For flow of gases, to determine whether to use compressible or incompressible fluid dynamics, the Mach number of the flow is evaluated. As a rough guide, compressible effects can be ignored at Mach numbers below approximately 0.3. For liquids, whether the incompressible assumption is valid depends on the fluid properties (specifically the critical pressure and temperature of the fluid) and the flow conditions (how close to the critical pressure the actual flow pressure becomes). Acoustic problems always require allowing compressibility, since sound waves are compression waves involving changes in pressure and density of the medium through which they propagate.

Newtonian versus non-Newtonian fluids

 
Flow around an airfoil

All fluids, except superfluids, are viscous, meaning that they exert some resistance to deformation: neighbouring parcels of fluid moving at different velocities exert viscous forces on each other. The velocity gradient is referred to as a strain rate; it has dimensions T−1. Isaac Newton showed that for many familiar fluids such as water and air, the stress due to these viscous forces is linearly related to the strain rate. Such fluids are called Newtonian fluids. The coefficient of proportionality is called the fluid's viscosity; for Newtonian fluids, it is a fluid property that is independent of the strain rate.

Non-Newtonian fluids have a more complicated, non-linear stress-strain behaviour. The sub-discipline of rheology describes the stress-strain behaviours of such fluids, which include emulsions and slurries, some viscoelastic materials such as blood and some polymers, and sticky liquids such as latex, honey and lubricants.[5]

Inviscid versus viscous versus Stokes flow

The dynamic of fluid parcels is described with the help of Newton's second law. An accelerating parcel of fluid is subject to inertial effects.

The Reynolds number is a dimensionless quantity which characterises the magnitude of inertial effects compared to the magnitude of viscous effects. A low Reynolds number (Re ≪ 1) indicates that viscous forces are very strong compared to inertial forces. In such cases, inertial forces are sometimes neglected; this flow regime is called Stokes or creeping flow.

In contrast, high Reynolds numbers (Re ≫ 1) indicate that the inertial effects have more effect on the velocity field than the viscous (friction) effects. In high Reynolds number flows, the flow is often modeled as an inviscid flow, an approximation in which viscosity is completely neglected. Eliminating viscosity allows the Navier–Stokes equations to be simplified into the Euler equations. The integration of the Euler equations along a streamline in an inviscid flow yields Bernoulli's equation. When, in addition to being inviscid, the flow is irrotational everywhere, Bernoulli's equation can completely describe the flow everywhere. Such flows are called potential flows, because the velocity field may be expressed as the gradient of a potential energy expression.

This idea can work fairly well when the Reynolds number is high. However, problems such as those involving solid boundaries may require that the viscosity be included. Viscosity cannot be neglected near solid boundaries because the no-slip condition generates a thin region of large strain rate, the boundary layer, in which viscosity effects dominate and which thus generates vorticity. Therefore, to calculate net forces on bodies (such as wings), viscous flow equations must be used: inviscid flow theory fails to predict drag forces, a limitation known as the d'Alembert's paradox.

A commonly used[6] model, especially in computational fluid dynamics, is to use two flow models: the Euler equations away from the body, and boundary layer equations in a region close to the body. The two solutions can then be matched with each other, using the method of matched asymptotic expansions.

Steady versus unsteady flow

 
Hydrodynamics simulation of the Rayleigh–Taylor instability[7]

A flow that is not a function of time is called steady flow. Steady-state flow refers to the condition where the fluid properties at a point in the system do not change over time. Time dependent flow is known as unsteady (also called transient[8]). Whether a particular flow is steady or unsteady, can depend on the chosen frame of reference. For instance, laminar flow over a sphere is steady in the frame of reference that is stationary with respect to the sphere. In a frame of reference that is stationary with respect to a background flow, the flow is unsteady.

Turbulent flows are unsteady by definition. A turbulent flow can, however, be statistically stationary. The random velocity field U(x, t) is statistically stationary if all statistics are invariant under a shift in time.[9]: 75  This roughly means that all statistical properties are constant in time. Often, the mean field is the object of interest, and this is constant too in a statistically stationary flow.

Steady flows are often more tractable than otherwise similar unsteady flows. The governing equations of a steady problem have one dimension fewer (time) than the governing equations of the same problem without taking advantage of the steadiness of the flow field.

Laminar versus turbulent flow

 
The transition from laminar to turbulent flow

Turbulence is flow characterized by recirculation, eddies, and apparent randomness. Flow in which turbulence is not exhibited is called laminar. The presence of eddies or recirculation alone does not necessarily indicate turbulent flow—these phenomena may be present in laminar flow as well. Mathematically, turbulent flow is often represented via a Reynolds decomposition, in which the flow is broken down into the sum of an average component and a perturbation component.

It is believed that turbulent flows can be described well through the use of the Navier–Stokes equations. Direct numerical simulation (DNS), based on the Navier–Stokes equations, makes it possible to simulate turbulent flows at moderate Reynolds numbers. Restrictions depend on the power of the computer used and the efficiency of the solution algorithm. The results of DNS have been found to agree well with experimental data for some flows.[10]

Most flows of interest have Reynolds numbers much too high for DNS to be a viable option,[9]: 344  given the state of computational power for the next few decades. Any flight vehicle large enough to carry a human (L > 3 m), moving faster than 20 m/s (72 km/h; 45 mph) is well beyond the limit of DNS simulation (Re = 4 million). Transport aircraft wings (such as on an Airbus A300 or Boeing 747) have Reynolds numbers of 40 million (based on the wing chord dimension). Solving these real-life flow problems requires turbulence models for the foreseeable future. Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes equations (RANS) combined with turbulence modelling provides a model of the effects of the turbulent flow. Such a modelling mainly provides the additional momentum transfer by the Reynolds stresses, although the turbulence also enhances the heat and mass transfer. Another promising methodology is large eddy simulation (LES), especially in the guise of detached eddy simulation (DES)—which is a combination of RANS turbulence modelling and large eddy simulation.

Other approximations

There are a large number of other possible approximations to fluid dynamic problems. Some of the more commonly used are listed below.

Multidisciplinary types

Flows according to Mach regimes

While many flows (such as flow of water through a pipe) occur at low Mach numbers (subsonic flows), many flows of practical interest in aerodynamics or in turbomachines occur at high fractions of M = 1 (transonic flows) or in excess of it (supersonic or even hypersonic flows). New phenomena occur at these regimes such as instabilities in transonic flow, shock waves for supersonic flow, or non-equilibrium chemical behaviour due to ionization in hypersonic flows. In practice, each of those flow regimes is treated separately.

Reactive versus non-reactive flows

Reactive flows are flows that are chemically reactive, which finds its applications in many areas, including combustion (IC engine), propulsion devices (rockets, jet engines, and so on), detonations, fire and safety hazards, and astrophysics. In addition to conservation of mass, momentum and energy, conservation of individual species (for example, mass fraction of methane in methane combustion) need to be derived, where the production/depletion rate of any species are obtained by simultaneously solving the equations of chemical kinetics.

Magnetohydrodynamics

Magnetohydrodynamics is the multidisciplinary study of the flow of electrically conducting fluids in electromagnetic fields. Examples of such fluids include plasmas, liquid metals, and salt water. The fluid flow equations are solved simultaneously with Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism.

Relativistic fluid dynamics

Relativistic fluid dynamics studies the macroscopic and microscopic fluid motion at large velocities comparable to the velocity of light.[11] This branch of fluid dynamics accounts for the relativistic effects both from the special theory of relativity and the general theory of relativity. The governing equations are derived in Riemannian geometry for Minkowski spacetime.

Fluctuating hydrodynamics

This branch of fluid dynamics augments the standard hydrodynamic equations with stochastic fluxes that model thermal fluctuations.[12] As formulated by Landau and Lifshitz,[13] a white noise contribution obtained from the fluctuation-dissipation theorem of statistical mechanics is added to the viscous stress tensor and heat flux.

Terminology

The concept of pressure is central to the study of both fluid statics and fluid dynamics. A pressure can be identified for every point in a body of fluid, regardless of whether the fluid is in motion or not. Pressure can be measured using an aneroid, Bourdon tube, mercury column, or various other methods.

Some of the terminology that is necessary in the study of fluid dynamics is not found in other similar areas of study. In particular, some of the terminology used in fluid dynamics is not used in fluid statics.

Terminology in incompressible fluid dynamics

The concepts of total pressure and dynamic pressure arise from Bernoulli's equation and are significant in the study of all fluid flows. (These two pressures are not pressures in the usual sense—they cannot be measured using an aneroid, Bourdon tube or mercury column.) To avoid potential ambiguity when referring to pressure in fluid dynamics, many authors use the term static pressure to distinguish it from total pressure and dynamic pressure. Static pressure is identical to pressure and can be identified for every point in a fluid flow field.

A point in a fluid flow where the flow has come to rest (that is to say, speed is equal to zero adjacent to some solid body immersed in the fluid flow) is of special significance. It is of such importance that it is given a special name—a stagnation point. The static pressure at the stagnation point is of special significance and is given its own name—stagnation pressure. In incompressible flows, the stagnation pressure at a stagnation point is equal to the total pressure throughout the flow field.

Terminology in compressible fluid dynamics

In a compressible fluid, it is convenient to define the total conditions (also called stagnation conditions) for all thermodynamic state properties (such as total temperature, total enthalpy, total speed of sound). These total flow conditions are a function of the fluid velocity and have different values in frames of reference with different motion.

To avoid potential ambiguity when referring to the properties of the fluid associated with the state of the fluid rather than its motion, the prefix "static" is commonly used (such as static temperature and static enthalpy). Where there is no prefix, the fluid property is the static condition (so "density" and "static density" mean the same thing). The static conditions are independent of the frame of reference.

Because the total flow conditions are defined by isentropically bringing the fluid to rest, there is no need to distinguish between total entropy and static entropy as they are always equal by definition. As such, entropy is most commonly referred to as simply "entropy".

About

Fields of study

Mathematical equations and concepts

Types of fluid flow

Fluid properties

Fluid phenomena

Applications

Fluid dynamics journals

Miscellaneous

See also

  • Aileron – Aircraft control surface used to induce roll
  • Airplane – Powered, flying vehicle with wings
  • Angle of attack – Angle between the chord of a wing and the undisturbed airflow
  • Banked turn – Inclination of road or surface other than flat
  • Bernoulli's principle – Principle relating to fluid dynamics
  • Bilgeboard
  • Boomerang – Thrown tool and weapon
  • Centerboard – Retractable keel which pivots out of a slot in the hull of a sailboat
  • Chord (aircraft) – Imaginary straight line joining the leading and trailing edges of an aerofoil
  • Circulation control wing – Aircraft high-lift device
  • Currentology – Science that studies the internal movements of water masses
  • Diving plane – submarine control surface used to help control depth
  • Downforce – Downwards lift force created by the aerodynamic characteristics of a vehicle
  • Drag coefficient – Dimensionless parameter to quantify fluid resistance
  • Fin – Thin component or appendage attached to a larger body or structure
  • Flipper (anatomy) – Flattened limb adapted for propulsion and maneuvering in water
  • Flow separation – Detachment of a boundary layer from a surface into a wake
  • Foil (fluid mechanics) – Solid object used in fluid mechanics
  • Fluid coupling – Device used to transmit rotating mechanical power
  • Gas kinetics – Study of the motion of gases
  • Hydrofoil – A type of fast watercraft and the name of the technology it uses
  • Keel – Lower centreline structural element of a ship or boat hull (hydrodynamic)
  • Küssner effect – Unsteady aerodynamic forces on an airfoil or hydrofoil caused by encountering a transverse gust
  • Kutta condition – Fluid dynamics principle regarding bodies with sharp corners
  • Kutta–Joukowski theorem – Formula relating lift on an airfoil to fluid speed, density, and circulation
  • Lift coefficient – Dimensionless quantity relating lift to fluid density and velocity over an area
  • Lift-induced drag – Type of aerodynamic resistance against the motion of a wing or other airfoil
  • Lift-to-drag ratio – Measure of aerodynamic efficiency
  • Lifting-line theory – Mathematical model to quantify lift
  • NACA airfoil – Wing shape
  • Newton's third law – Laws in physics about force and motion
  • Propeller – Device that transmits rotational power into linear thrust on a fluid
  • Pump – Device that imparts energy to the fluids by mechanical action
  • Rudder – Control surface for fluid-dynamic steering in the yaw axis
  • Sail – Fabric or other surface supported by a mast to allow wind propulsion (aerodynamics)
  • Skeg – Extension of a boat's keel at the back, also a surfboard's fin
  • Spoiler (automotive) – Device for reducing aerodynamic drag
  • Stall (flight) – Abrupt reduction in lift due to flow separation
  • Surfboard fin – part of a surfboard
  • Surface science – Study of physical and chemical phenomena that occur at the interface of two phases
  • Torque converter – Fluid coupling that transfers rotating power from a prime mover to a rotating driven load
  • Trim tab – Boat or aircraft component
  • Wing – Surface used for flight, for example by insects, birds, bats and airplanes
  • Wingtip vortices – Turbulence caused by difference in air pressure on either side of wing

References

  1. ^ Eckert, Michael (2006). The Dawn of Fluid Dynamics: A Discipline Between Science and Technology. Wiley. p. ix. ISBN 3-527-40513-5.
  2. ^ a b Anderson, J. D. (2007). Fundamentals of Aerodynamics (4th ed.). London: McGraw–Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-125408-3.
  3. ^ Nangia, Nishant; Johansen, Hans; Patankar, Neelesh A.; Bhalla, Amneet Pal S. (2017). "A moving control volume approach to computing hydrodynamic forces and torques on immersed bodies". Journal of Computational Physics. 347: 437–462. arXiv:1704.00239. Bibcode:2017JCoPh.347..437N. doi:10.1016/j.jcp.2017.06.047. S2CID 37560541.
  4. ^ White, F. M. (1974). Viscous Fluid Flow. New York: McGraw–Hill. ISBN 0-07-069710-8.
  5. ^ Wilson, DI (February 2018). "What is Rheology?". Eye. 32 (2): 179–183. doi:10.1038/eye.2017.267. PMC 5811736. PMID 29271417.
  6. ^ Platzer, B. (2006-12-01). "Book Review: Cebeci, T. and Cousteix, J., Modeling and Computation of Boundary-Layer Flows". ZAMM. 86 (12): 981–982. Bibcode:2006ZaMM...86..981P. doi:10.1002/zamm.200690053. ISSN 0044-2267.
  7. ^ Shengtai Li, Hui Li "Parallel AMR Code for Compressible MHD or HD Equations" (Los Alamos National Laboratory) [1] 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "Transient state or unsteady state? -- CFD Online Discussion Forums". www.cfd-online.com.
  9. ^ a b Pope, Stephen B. (2000). Turbulent Flows. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-59886-9.
  10. ^ See, for example, Schlatter et al, Phys. Fluids 21, 051702 (2009); doi:10.1063/1.3139294
  11. ^ Landau, Lev Davidovich; Lifshitz, Evgenii Mikhailovich (1987). Fluid Mechanics. London: Pergamon. ISBN 0-08-033933-6.
  12. ^ Ortiz de Zarate, Jose M.; Sengers, Jan V. (2006). Hydrodynamic Fluctuations in Fluids and Fluid Mixtures. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
  13. ^ Landau, Lev Davidovich; Lifshitz, Evgenii Mikhailovich (1959). Fluid Mechanics. London: Pergamon.

Further reading

  • Acheson, D. J. (1990). Elementary Fluid Dynamics. Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-859679-0.
  • Batchelor, G. K. (1967). An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-66396-2.
  • Chanson, H. (2009). Applied Hydrodynamics: An Introduction to Ideal and Real Fluid Flows. CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, Leiden, The Netherlands, 478 pages. ISBN 978-0-415-49271-3.
  • Clancy, L. J. (1975). Aerodynamics. London: Pitman Publishing Limited. ISBN 0-273-01120-0.
  • Lamb, Horace (1994). Hydrodynamics (6th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45868-4. Originally published in 1879, the 6th extended edition appeared first in 1932.
  • Milne-Thompson, L. M. (1968). Theoretical Hydrodynamics (5th ed.). Macmillan. Originally published in 1938.
  • Shinbrot, M. (1973). Lectures on Fluid Mechanics. Gordon and Breach. ISBN 0-677-01710-3.
  • Nazarenko, Sergey (2014), Fluid Dynamics via Examples and Solutions, CRC Press (Taylor & Francis group), ISBN 978-1-43-988882-7
  • Encyclopedia: Fluid dynamics Scholarpedia

External links

  • National Committee for Fluid Mechanics Films (NCFMF), containing films on several subjects in fluid dynamics (in RealMedia format)
  • Gallery of fluid motion, "a visual record of the aesthetic and science of contemporary fluid mechanics," from the American Physical Society

fluid, dynamics, physics, physical, chemistry, engineering, fluid, dynamics, subdiscipline, fluid, mechanics, that, describes, flow, fluids, liquids, gases, several, subdisciplines, including, aerodynamics, study, other, gases, motion, hydrodynamics, study, li. In physics physical chemistry and engineering fluid dynamics is a subdiscipline of fluid mechanics that describes the flow of fluids liquids and gases It has several subdisciplines including aerodynamics the study of air and other gases in motion and hydrodynamics the study of liquids in motion Fluid dynamics has a wide range of applications including calculating forces and moments on aircraft determining the mass flow rate of petroleum through pipelines predicting weather patterns understanding nebulae in interstellar space and modelling fission weapon detonation Typical aerodynamic teardrop shape assuming a viscous medium passing from left to right the diagram shows the pressure distribution as the thickness of the black line and shows the velocity in the boundary layer as the violet triangles The green vortex generators prompt the transition to turbulent flow and prevent back flow also called flow separation from the high pressure region in the back The surface in front is as smooth as possible or even employs shark like skin as any turbulence here increases the energy of the airflow The truncation on the right known as a Kammback also prevents backflow from the high pressure region in the back across the spoilers to the convergent part Fluid dynamics offers a systematic structure which underlies these practical disciplines that embraces empirical and semi empirical laws derived from flow measurement and used to solve practical problems The solution to a fluid dynamics problem typically involves the calculation of various properties of the fluid such as flow velocity pressure density and temperature as functions of space and time Before the twentieth century hydrodynamics was synonymous with fluid dynamics This is still reflected in names of some fluid dynamics topics like magnetohydrodynamics and hydrodynamic stability both of which can also be applied to gases 1 Contents 1 Equations 1 1 Conservation laws 2 Classifications 2 1 Compressible versus incompressible flow 2 2 Newtonian versus non Newtonian fluids 2 3 Inviscid versus viscous versus Stokes flow 2 4 Steady versus unsteady flow 2 5 Laminar versus turbulent flow 2 6 Other approximations 3 Multidisciplinary types 3 1 Flows according to Mach regimes 3 2 Reactive versus non reactive flows 3 3 Magnetohydrodynamics 3 4 Relativistic fluid dynamics 3 5 Fluctuating hydrodynamics 4 Terminology 4 1 Terminology in incompressible fluid dynamics 4 2 Terminology in compressible fluid dynamics 5 About 5 1 Fields of study 5 2 Mathematical equations and concepts 5 3 Types of fluid flow 5 4 Fluid properties 5 5 Fluid phenomena 5 6 Applications 5 7 Fluid dynamics journals 5 8 Miscellaneous 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEquations EditSee also Transport phenomena The foundational axioms of fluid dynamics are the conservation laws specifically conservation of mass conservation of linear momentum and conservation of energy also known as the First Law of Thermodynamics These are based on classical mechanics and are modified in quantum mechanics and general relativity They are expressed using the Reynolds transport theorem In addition to the above fluids are assumed to obey the continuum assumption Fluids are composed of molecules that collide with one another and solid objects However the continuum assumption assumes that fluids are continuous rather than discrete Consequently it is assumed that properties such as density pressure temperature and flow velocity are well defined at infinitesimally small points in space and vary continuously from one point to another The fact that the fluid is made up of discrete molecules is ignored For fluids that are sufficiently dense to be a continuum do not contain ionized species and have flow velocities that are small in relation to the speed of light the momentum equations for Newtonian fluids are the Navier Stokes equations which is a non linear set of differential equations that describes the flow of a fluid whose stress depends linearly on flow velocity gradients and pressure The unsimplified equations do not have a general closed form solution so they are primarily of use in computational fluid dynamics The equations can be simplified in several ways all of which make them easier to solve Some of the simplifications allow some simple fluid dynamics problems to be solved in closed form citation needed In addition to the mass momentum and energy conservation equations a thermodynamic equation of state that gives the pressure as a function of other thermodynamic variables is required to completely describe the problem An example of this would be the perfect gas equation of state p r R u T M displaystyle p frac rho R u T M where p is pressure r is density and T is the absolute temperature while Ru is the gas constant and M is molar mass for a particular gas A constitutive relation may also be useful Conservation laws Edit Three conservation laws are used to solve fluid dynamics problems and may be written in integral or differential form The conservation laws may be applied to a region of the flow called a control volume A control volume is a discrete volume in space through which fluid is assumed to flow The integral formulations of the conservation laws are used to describe the change of mass momentum or energy within the control volume Differential formulations of the conservation laws apply Stokes theorem to yield an expression that may be interpreted as the integral form of the law applied to an infinitesimally small volume at a point within the flow Mass continuity conservation of mass The rate of change of fluid mass inside a control volume must be equal to the net rate of fluid flow into the volume Physically this statement requires that mass is neither created nor destroyed in the control volume 2 and can be translated into the integral form of the continuity equation t V r d V displaystyle frac partial partial t iiint V rho dV S displaystyle scriptstyle S r u d S displaystyle rho mathbf u cdot d mathbf S Above r is the fluid density u is the flow velocity vector and t is time The left hand side of the above expression is the rate of increase of mass within the volume and contains a triple integral over the control volume whereas the right hand side contains an integration over the surface of the control volume of mass convected into the system Mass flow into the system is accounted as positive and since the normal vector to the surface is opposite to the sense of flow into the system the term is negated The differential form of the continuity equation is by the divergence theorem r t r u 0 displaystyle frac partial rho partial t nabla cdot rho mathbf u 0 dd Conservation of momentum See also Cauchy momentum equationNewton s second law of motion applied to a control volume is a statement that any change in momentum of the fluid within that control volume will be due to the net flow of momentum into the volume and the action of external forces acting on the fluid within the volume t V r u d V displaystyle frac partial partial t iiint scriptstyle V rho mathbf u dV S displaystyle scriptstyle S r u d S u displaystyle rho mathbf u cdot d mathbf S mathbf u S displaystyle scriptstyle S p d S displaystyle p d mathbf S V r f body d V F surf displaystyle displaystyle iiint scriptstyle V rho mathbf f text body dV mathbf F text surf In the above integral formulation of this equation the term on the left is the net change of momentum within the volume The first term on the right is the net rate at which momentum is convected into the volume The second term on the right is the force due to pressure on the volume s surfaces The first two terms on the right are negated since momentum entering the system is accounted as positive and the normal is opposite the direction of the velocity u and pressure forces The third term on the right is the net acceleration of the mass within the volume due to any body forces here represented by fbody Surface forces such as viscous forces are represented by Fsurf the net force due to shear forces acting on the volume surface The momentum balance can also be written for a moving control volume 3 The following is the differential form of the momentum conservation equation Here the volume is reduced to an infinitesimally small point and both surface and body forces are accounted for in one total force F For example F may be expanded into an expression for the frictional and gravitational forces acting at a point in a flow D u D t F p r displaystyle frac D mathbf u Dt mathbf F frac nabla p rho In aerodynamics air is assumed to be a Newtonian fluid which posits a linear relationship between the shear stress due to internal friction forces and the rate of strain of the fluid The equation above is a vector equation in a three dimensional flow but it can be expressed as three scalar equations in three coordinate directions The conservation of momentum equations for the compressible viscous flow case is called the Navier Stokes equations 2 dd Conservation of energy See also First law of thermodynamics fluid mechanics Although energy can be converted from one form to another the total energy in a closed system remains constant r D h D t D p D t k T F displaystyle rho frac Dh Dt frac Dp Dt nabla cdot left k nabla T right Phi Above h is the specific enthalpy k is the thermal conductivity of the fluid T is temperature and F is the viscous dissipation function The viscous dissipation function governs the rate at which the mechanical energy of the flow is converted to heat The second law of thermodynamics requires that the dissipation term is always positive viscosity cannot create energy within the control volume 4 The expression on the left side is a material derivative dd Classifications EditCompressible versus incompressible flow Edit All fluids are compressible to an extent that is changes in pressure or temperature cause changes in density However in many situations the changes in pressure and temperature are sufficiently small that the changes in density are negligible In this case the flow can be modelled as an incompressible flow Otherwise the more general compressible flow equations must be used Mathematically incompressibility is expressed by saying that the density r of a fluid parcel does not change as it moves in the flow field that is D r D t 0 displaystyle frac mathrm D rho mathrm D t 0 where D Dt is the material derivative which is the sum of local and convective derivatives This additional constraint simplifies the governing equations especially in the case when the fluid has a uniform density For flow of gases to determine whether to use compressible or incompressible fluid dynamics the Mach number of the flow is evaluated As a rough guide compressible effects can be ignored at Mach numbers below approximately 0 3 For liquids whether the incompressible assumption is valid depends on the fluid properties specifically the critical pressure and temperature of the fluid and the flow conditions how close to the critical pressure the actual flow pressure becomes Acoustic problems always require allowing compressibility since sound waves are compression waves involving changes in pressure and density of the medium through which they propagate Newtonian versus non Newtonian fluids Edit Flow around an airfoil All fluids except superfluids are viscous meaning that they exert some resistance to deformation neighbouring parcels of fluid moving at different velocities exert viscous forces on each other The velocity gradient is referred to as a strain rate it has dimensions T 1 Isaac Newton showed that for many familiar fluids such as water and air the stress due to these viscous forces is linearly related to the strain rate Such fluids are called Newtonian fluids The coefficient of proportionality is called the fluid s viscosity for Newtonian fluids it is a fluid property that is independent of the strain rate Non Newtonian fluids have a more complicated non linear stress strain behaviour The sub discipline of rheology describes the stress strain behaviours of such fluids which include emulsions and slurries some viscoelastic materials such as blood and some polymers and sticky liquids such as latex honey and lubricants 5 Inviscid versus viscous versus Stokes flow Edit The dynamic of fluid parcels is described with the help of Newton s second law An accelerating parcel of fluid is subject to inertial effects The Reynolds number is a dimensionless quantity which characterises the magnitude of inertial effects compared to the magnitude of viscous effects A low Reynolds number Re 1 indicates that viscous forces are very strong compared to inertial forces In such cases inertial forces are sometimes neglected this flow regime is called Stokes or creeping flow In contrast high Reynolds numbers Re 1 indicate that the inertial effects have more effect on the velocity field than the viscous friction effects In high Reynolds number flows the flow is often modeled as an inviscid flow an approximation in which viscosity is completely neglected Eliminating viscosity allows the Navier Stokes equations to be simplified into the Euler equations The integration of the Euler equations along a streamline in an inviscid flow yields Bernoulli s equation When in addition to being inviscid the flow is irrotational everywhere Bernoulli s equation can completely describe the flow everywhere Such flows are called potential flows because the velocity field may be expressed as the gradient of a potential energy expression This idea can work fairly well when the Reynolds number is high However problems such as those involving solid boundaries may require that the viscosity be included Viscosity cannot be neglected near solid boundaries because the no slip condition generates a thin region of large strain rate the boundary layer in which viscosity effects dominate and which thus generates vorticity Therefore to calculate net forces on bodies such as wings viscous flow equations must be used inviscid flow theory fails to predict drag forces a limitation known as the d Alembert s paradox A commonly used 6 model especially in computational fluid dynamics is to use two flow models the Euler equations away from the body and boundary layer equations in a region close to the body The two solutions can then be matched with each other using the method of matched asymptotic expansions Steady versus unsteady flow Edit Hydrodynamics simulation of the Rayleigh Taylor instability 7 A flow that is not a function of time is called steady flow Steady state flow refers to the condition where the fluid properties at a point in the system do not change over time Time dependent flow is known as unsteady also called transient 8 Whether a particular flow is steady or unsteady can depend on the chosen frame of reference For instance laminar flow over a sphere is steady in the frame of reference that is stationary with respect to the sphere In a frame of reference that is stationary with respect to a background flow the flow is unsteady Turbulent flows are unsteady by definition A turbulent flow can however be statistically stationary The random velocity field U x t is statistically stationary if all statistics are invariant under a shift in time 9 75 This roughly means that all statistical properties are constant in time Often the mean field is the object of interest and this is constant too in a statistically stationary flow Steady flows are often more tractable than otherwise similar unsteady flows The governing equations of a steady problem have one dimension fewer time than the governing equations of the same problem without taking advantage of the steadiness of the flow field Laminar versus turbulent flow Edit The transition from laminar to turbulent flow Turbulence is flow characterized by recirculation eddies and apparent randomness Flow in which turbulence is not exhibited is called laminar The presence of eddies or recirculation alone does not necessarily indicate turbulent flow these phenomena may be present in laminar flow as well Mathematically turbulent flow is often represented via a Reynolds decomposition in which the flow is broken down into the sum of an average component and a perturbation component It is believed that turbulent flows can be described well through the use of the Navier Stokes equations Direct numerical simulation DNS based on the Navier Stokes equations makes it possible to simulate turbulent flows at moderate Reynolds numbers Restrictions depend on the power of the computer used and the efficiency of the solution algorithm The results of DNS have been found to agree well with experimental data for some flows 10 Most flows of interest have Reynolds numbers much too high for DNS to be a viable option 9 344 given the state of computational power for the next few decades Any flight vehicle large enough to carry a human L gt 3 m moving faster than 20 m s 72 km h 45 mph is well beyond the limit of DNS simulation Re 4 million Transport aircraft wings such as on an Airbus A300 or Boeing 747 have Reynolds numbers of 40 million based on the wing chord dimension Solving these real life flow problems requires turbulence models for the foreseeable future Reynolds averaged Navier Stokes equations RANS combined with turbulence modelling provides a model of the effects of the turbulent flow Such a modelling mainly provides the additional momentum transfer by the Reynolds stresses although the turbulence also enhances the heat and mass transfer Another promising methodology is large eddy simulation LES especially in the guise of detached eddy simulation DES which is a combination of RANS turbulence modelling and large eddy simulation Other approximations Edit There are a large number of other possible approximations to fluid dynamic problems Some of the more commonly used are listed below The Boussinesq approximation neglects variations in density except to calculate buoyancy forces It is often used in free convection problems where density changes are small Lubrication theory and Hele Shaw flow exploits the large aspect ratio of the domain to show that certain terms in the equations are small and so can be neglected Slender body theory is a methodology used in Stokes flow problems to estimate the force on or flow field around a long slender object in a viscous fluid The shallow water equations can be used to describe a layer of relatively inviscid fluid with a free surface in which surface gradients are small Darcy s law is used for flow in porous media and works with variables averaged over several pore widths In rotating systems the quasi geostrophic equations assume an almost perfect balance between pressure gradients and the Coriolis force It is useful in the study of atmospheric dynamics Multidisciplinary types EditFlows according to Mach regimes Edit Main article Mach number While many flows such as flow of water through a pipe occur at low Mach numbers subsonic flows many flows of practical interest in aerodynamics or in turbomachines occur at high fractions of M 1 transonic flows or in excess of it supersonic or even hypersonic flows New phenomena occur at these regimes such as instabilities in transonic flow shock waves for supersonic flow or non equilibrium chemical behaviour due to ionization in hypersonic flows In practice each of those flow regimes is treated separately Reactive versus non reactive flows Edit Reactive flows are flows that are chemically reactive which finds its applications in many areas including combustion IC engine propulsion devices rockets jet engines and so on detonations fire and safety hazards and astrophysics In addition to conservation of mass momentum and energy conservation of individual species for example mass fraction of methane in methane combustion need to be derived where the production depletion rate of any species are obtained by simultaneously solving the equations of chemical kinetics Magnetohydrodynamics Edit Main article Magnetohydrodynamics Magnetohydrodynamics is the multidisciplinary study of the flow of electrically conducting fluids in electromagnetic fields Examples of such fluids include plasmas liquid metals and salt water The fluid flow equations are solved simultaneously with Maxwell s equations of electromagnetism Relativistic fluid dynamics Edit Relativistic fluid dynamics studies the macroscopic and microscopic fluid motion at large velocities comparable to the velocity of light 11 This branch of fluid dynamics accounts for the relativistic effects both from the special theory of relativity and the general theory of relativity The governing equations are derived in Riemannian geometry for Minkowski spacetime Fluctuating hydrodynamics Edit This branch of fluid dynamics augments the standard hydrodynamic equations with stochastic fluxes that model thermal fluctuations 12 As formulated by Landau and Lifshitz 13 a white noise contribution obtained from the fluctuation dissipation theorem of statistical mechanics is added to the viscous stress tensor and heat flux Terminology EditThe concept of pressure is central to the study of both fluid statics and fluid dynamics A pressure can be identified for every point in a body of fluid regardless of whether the fluid is in motion or not Pressure can be measured using an aneroid Bourdon tube mercury column or various other methods Some of the terminology that is necessary in the study of fluid dynamics is not found in other similar areas of study In particular some of the terminology used in fluid dynamics is not used in fluid statics Terminology in incompressible fluid dynamics Edit The concepts of total pressure and dynamic pressure arise from Bernoulli s equation and are significant in the study of all fluid flows These two pressures are not pressures in the usual sense they cannot be measured using an aneroid Bourdon tube or mercury column To avoid potential ambiguity when referring to pressure in fluid dynamics many authors use the term static pressure to distinguish it from total pressure and dynamic pressure Static pressure is identical to pressure and can be identified for every point in a fluid flow field A point in a fluid flow where the flow has come to rest that is to say speed is equal to zero adjacent to some solid body immersed in the fluid flow is of special significance It is of such importance that it is given a special name a stagnation point The static pressure at the stagnation point is of special significance and is given its own name stagnation pressure In incompressible flows the stagnation pressure at a stagnation point is equal to the total pressure throughout the flow field Terminology in compressible fluid dynamics Edit In a compressible fluid it is convenient to define the total conditions also called stagnation conditions for all thermodynamic state properties such as total temperature total enthalpy total speed of sound These total flow conditions are a function of the fluid velocity and have different values in frames of reference with different motion To avoid potential ambiguity when referring to the properties of the fluid associated with the state of the fluid rather than its motion the prefix static is commonly used such as static temperature and static enthalpy Where there is no prefix the fluid property is the static condition so density and static density mean the same thing The static conditions are independent of the frame of reference Because the total flow conditions are defined by isentropically bringing the fluid to rest there is no need to distinguish between total entropy and static entropy as they are always equal by definition As such entropy is most commonly referred to as simply entropy About EditFields of study Edit Acoustic theory Aerodynamics Aeroelasticity Aeronautics Computational fluid dynamics Flow measurement Geophysical fluid dynamics Hemodynamics Hydraulics Hydrology Hydrostatics Electrohydrodynamics Magnetohydrodynamics Quantum hydrodynamics Mathematical equations and concepts Edit Airy wave theory Benjamin Bona Mahony equation Boussinesq approximation water waves Different types of boundary conditions in fluid dynamics Elementary flow Helmholtz s theorems Kirchhoff equations Knudsen equation Manning equation Mild slope equation Morison equation Navier Stokes equations Oseen flow Poiseuille s law Pressure head Relativistic Euler equations Stokes stream function Stream function Streamlines streaklines and pathlines Torricelli s Law Types of fluid flow Edit Aerodynamic force Convection Cavitation Compressible flow Couette flow Effusive limit Free molecular flow Incompressible flow Inviscid flow Isothermal flow Open channel flow Pipe flow Pressure driven flow Secondary flow Stream thrust averaging Superfluidity Transient flow Two phase flow Fluid properties Edit List of hydrodynamic instabilities Newtonian fluid Non Newtonian fluid Surface tension Vapour pressure Fluid phenomena Edit Balanced flow Boundary layer Coanda effect Convection cell Convergence Bifurcation Darwin drift Drag force Droplet vaporization Hydrodynamic stability Kaye effect Lift force Magnus effect Ocean current Ocean surface waves Rossby wave Shock wave Soliton Stokes drift Teapot effect Thread breakup Turbulent jet breakup Upstream contamination Venturi effect Vortex Water hammer Wave drag Wind Applications Edit Acoustics Aerodynamics Cryosphere science EFDC Explorer Fluidics Fluid power Geodynamics Hydraulic machinery Meteorology Naval architecture Oceanography Plasma physics Pneumatics 3D computer graphics Fluid dynamics journals Edit Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics Journal of Fluid Mechanics Physics of Fluids Physical Review Fluids Experiments in Fluids European Journal of Mechanics B Fluids Theoretical and Computational Fluid Dynamics Computers and Fluids International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids Flow Turbulence and Combustion Miscellaneous Edit Important publications in fluid dynamics Isosurface Keulegan Carpenter number Rotating tank Sound barrier Beta plane Immersed boundary method Bridge scour Finite volume method for unsteady flow Flow visualizationSee also EditAileron Aircraft control surface used to induce roll Airplane Powered flying vehicle with wings Angle of attack Angle between the chord of a wing and the undisturbed airflow Banked turn Inclination of road or surface other than flat Bernoulli s principle Principle relating to fluid dynamics Bilgeboard Boomerang Thrown tool and weapon Centerboard Retractable keel which pivots out of a slot in the hull of a sailboatPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Chord aircraft Imaginary straight line joining the leading and trailing edges of an aerofoilPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Circulation control wing Aircraft high lift device Currentology Science that studies the internal movements of water masses Diving plane submarine control surface used to help control depthPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Downforce Downwards lift force created by the aerodynamic characteristics of a vehicle Drag coefficient Dimensionless parameter to quantify fluid resistance Fin Thin component or appendage attached to a larger body or structure Flipper anatomy Flattened limb adapted for propulsion and maneuvering in water Flow separation Detachment of a boundary layer from a surface into a wake Foil fluid mechanics Solid object used in fluid mechanics Fluid coupling Device used to transmit rotating mechanical power Gas kinetics Study of the motion of gases Hydrofoil A type of fast watercraft and the name of the technology it uses Keel Lower centreline structural element of a ship or boat hull hydrodynamic Kussner effect Unsteady aerodynamic forces on an airfoil or hydrofoil caused by encountering a transverse gust Kutta condition Fluid dynamics principle regarding bodies with sharp corners Kutta Joukowski theorem Formula relating lift on an airfoil to fluid speed density and circulation Lift coefficient Dimensionless quantity relating lift to fluid density and velocity over an area Lift induced drag Type of aerodynamic resistance against the motion of a wing or other airfoil Lift to drag ratio Measure of aerodynamic efficiency Lifting line theory Mathematical model to quantify lift NACA airfoil Wing shape Newton s third law Laws in physics about force and motionPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Propeller Device that transmits rotational power into linear thrust on a fluid Pump Device that imparts energy to the fluids by mechanical action Rudder Control surface for fluid dynamic steering in the yaw axis Sail Fabric or other surface supported by a mast to allow wind propulsion aerodynamics Skeg Extension of a boat s keel at the back also a surfboard s fin Spoiler automotive Device for reducing aerodynamic dragPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Stall flight Abrupt reduction in lift due to flow separationPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Surfboard fin part of a surfboardPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Surface science Study of physical and chemical phenomena that occur at the interface of two phases Torque converter Fluid coupling that transfers rotating power from a prime mover to a rotating driven load Trim tab Boat or aircraft component Wing Surface used for flight for example by insects birds bats and airplanes Wingtip vortices Turbulence caused by difference in air pressure on either side of wingReferences Edit Eckert Michael 2006 The Dawn of Fluid Dynamics A Discipline Between Science and Technology Wiley p ix ISBN 3 527 40513 5 a b Anderson J D 2007 Fundamentals of Aerodynamics 4th ed London McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 125408 3 Nangia Nishant Johansen Hans Patankar Neelesh A Bhalla Amneet Pal S 2017 A moving control volume approach to computing hydrodynamic forces and torques on immersed bodies Journal of Computational Physics 347 437 462 arXiv 1704 00239 Bibcode 2017JCoPh 347 437N doi 10 1016 j jcp 2017 06 047 S2CID 37560541 White F M 1974 Viscous Fluid Flow New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 069710 8 Wilson DI February 2018 What is Rheology Eye 32 2 179 183 doi 10 1038 eye 2017 267 PMC 5811736 PMID 29271417 Platzer B 2006 12 01 Book Review Cebeci T and Cousteix J Modeling and Computation of Boundary Layer Flows ZAMM 86 12 981 982 Bibcode 2006ZaMM 86 981P doi 10 1002 zamm 200690053 ISSN 0044 2267 Shengtai Li Hui Li Parallel AMR Code for Compressible MHD or HD Equations Los Alamos National Laboratory 1 Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Transient state or unsteady state CFD Online Discussion Forums www cfd online com a b Pope Stephen B 2000 Turbulent Flows Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 59886 9 See for example Schlatter et al Phys Fluids 21 051702 2009 doi 10 1063 1 3139294 Landau Lev Davidovich Lifshitz Evgenii Mikhailovich 1987 Fluid Mechanics London Pergamon ISBN 0 08 033933 6 Ortiz de Zarate Jose M Sengers Jan V 2006 Hydrodynamic Fluctuations in Fluids and Fluid Mixtures Amsterdam Elsevier Landau Lev Davidovich Lifshitz Evgenii Mikhailovich 1959 Fluid Mechanics London Pergamon Further reading EditAcheson D J 1990 Elementary Fluid Dynamics Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 859679 0 Batchelor G K 1967 An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 66396 2 Chanson H 2009 Applied Hydrodynamics An Introduction to Ideal and Real Fluid Flows CRC Press Taylor amp Francis Group Leiden The Netherlands 478 pages ISBN 978 0 415 49271 3 Clancy L J 1975 Aerodynamics London Pitman Publishing Limited ISBN 0 273 01120 0 Lamb Horace 1994 Hydrodynamics 6th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 45868 4 Originally published in 1879 the 6th extended edition appeared first in 1932 Milne Thompson L M 1968 Theoretical Hydrodynamics 5th ed Macmillan Originally published in 1938 Shinbrot M 1973 Lectures on Fluid Mechanics Gordon and Breach ISBN 0 677 01710 3 Nazarenko Sergey 2014 Fluid Dynamics via Examples and Solutions CRC Press Taylor amp Francis group ISBN 978 1 43 988882 7 Encyclopedia Fluid dynamics ScholarpediaExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fluid dynamics National Committee for Fluid Mechanics Films NCFMF containing films on several subjects in fluid dynamics in RealMedia format Gallery of fluid motion a visual record of the aesthetic and science of contemporary fluid mechanics from the American Physical Society List of Fluid Dynamics books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fluid dynamics amp oldid 1135383222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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