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Stagnation point flow

In fluid dynamics, stagnation point flow represents the flow of a fluid in the immediate neighborhood of a stagnation point (or a stagnation line) with which the stagnation point (or the line) is identified for a potential flow or inviscid flow. The flow specifically considers a class of stagnation points known as saddle points where the incoming streamlines gets deflected and directed outwards in a different direction; the streamline deflections are guided by separatrices. The flow in the neighborhood of the stagnation point or line can generally be described using potential flow theory, although viscous effects cannot be neglected if the stagnation point lies on a solid surface.

Stagnation point flow without solid surfaces

When two streams either of two-dimensional or axisymmetric nature impinge on each other orthogonally, a stagnation plane is created, where the incoming streams are diverted tangentially outwards; thus on the stagnation plane, the velocity component normal to that plane is zero, whereas the tangential component is non-zero. In the neighborhood of the stagnation point, a local description for the velocity field can be described.

General three-dimensional velocity field

The stagnation point flow corresponds to a linear dependence on the coordinates, that can be described in the Cartesian coordinates   with velocity components   as follows

 

where   are constants referred as the strain rates; these constants are not completely arbitrary since the continuity equation requires  , that is to say, only two of the three constants are independent. We shall assume   so that flow is towards the stagnation point in the   direction and away from the stagnation point in the   direction. Without loss of generality, one can assume that  . The flow field can be categorized into different types based on a single parameter[1]

 

Planar stagnation-point flow

The two-dimensional stagnation-point flow belongs to the case  . The flow field is described as follows

 

where we let  . This flow field is investigated as early as 1934 by G. I. Taylor.[2] In the laboratory, this flow field is created using a four-mill apparatus, although these flow fields are ubiquitous in turbulent flows.

Axisymmetric stagnation-point flow

The axisymmetric stagnation point flow corresponds to  . The flow field can be simply described in cylindrical coordinate system   with velocity components   as follows

 

where we let  .

Radial stagnation flows

In radial stagnation flows, instead of a stagnation point, we have a stagnation circle and the stagnation plane is replaced by a stagnation cylinder. The radial stagnation flow is described using the cylindrical coordinate system   with velocity components   as follows[3][4][5]

 

where   is the location of the stagnation cylinder.

Hiemenz flow[6][7]

 
Two-dimensional stagnation point flow

The flow due to the presence of a solid surface at   in planar stagnation-point flow was described first by Karl Hiemenz in 1911,[8] whose numerical computations for the solutions were improved later by Leslie Howarth.[9] A familiar example where Hiemenz flow is applicable is the forward stagnation line that occurs in the flow over a circular cylinder.

The solid surface lies on the  . According to potential flow theory, the fluid motion described in terms of the stream function   and the velocity components   are given by

 

The stagnation line for this flow is  . The velocity component   is non-zero on the solid surface indicating that the above velocity field do not satisfy no-slip boundary condition on the wall. To find the velocity components that satisfy the no-slip boundary condition, one assumes the following form

 

where   is the Kinematic viscosity and   is the characteristic thickness where viscous effects are significant. The existence of constant value for the viscous effects thickness is due to the competing balance between the fluid convection that is directed towards the solid surface and viscous diffusion that is directed away from the surface. Thus the vorticity produced at the solid surface is able to diffuse only to distances of order  ; analogous situations that resembles this behavior occurs in asymptotic suction profile and von Kármán swirling flow. The velocity components, pressure and Navier–Stokes equations then become

 
 

The requirements that   at   and that   as   translate to

 

The condition for   as   cannot be prescribed and is obtained as a part of the solution. The problem formulated here is a special case of Falkner-Skan boundary layer. The solution can be obtained from numerical integrations and is shown in the figure. The asymptotic behaviors for large   are

 

where   is the displacement thickness.

Stagnation point flow with a translating wall[10]

Hiemenz flow when the solid wall translates with a constant velocity   along the   was solved by Rott (1956).[11] This problem describes the flow in the neighbourhood of the forward stagnation line occurring in a flow over a rotating cylinder. The required stream function is

 

where the function   satisfies

 

The solution to the above equation is given by  

Oblique stagnation point flow

If the incoming stream is perpendicular to the stagnation line, but approaches obliquely, the outer flow is not potential, but has a constant vorticity  . The appropriate stream function for oblique stagnation point flow is given by

 

Viscous effects due to the presence of a solid wall was studied by Stuart (1959),[12] Tamada (1979)[13] and Dorrepaal (1986).[14] In their approach, the streamfunction takes the form

 

where the function  

 .

Homann flow

 
Homann flow with injection
 
Homann flow with suction

The solution for axisymmetric stagnation point flow in the presence of a solid wall was first obtained by Homann (1936).[15] A typical example of this flow is the forward stagnation point appearing in a flow past a sphere. Paul A. Libby (1974)[16](1976)[17] extended Homann's work by allowing the solid wall to translate along its own plane with a constant speed and allowing constant suction or injection at the solid surface.

The solution for this problem is obtained in the cylindrical coorindate system   by introducing

 

where   is the translational speed of the wall and   is the injection (or, suction) velocity at the wall. The problem is axisymmetric only when  . The pressure is given by

 

The Navier–Stokes equations then reduce to

 

along with boundary conditions,

 

When  , the classical Homann problem is recovered.

Plane counterflows

Jets emerging from a slot-jets creates stagnation point in between according to potential theory. The flow near the stagnation point can by studied using self-similar solution. This setup is widely used in combustion experiments. The initial study of impinging stagnation flows are due to C.Y. Wang.[18][19] Let two fluids with constant properties denoted with suffix   flowing from opposite direction impinge, and assume the two fluids are immiscible and the interface (located at  ) is planar. The velocity is given by

 

where   are strain rates of the fluids. At the interface, velocities, tangential stress and pressure must be continuous. Introducing the self-similar transformation,

 
 

results equations,

 
 

The no-penetration condition at the interface and free stream condition far away from the stagnation plane become

 

But the equations require two more boundary conditions. At  , the tangential velocities  , the tangential stress   and the pressure   are continuous. Therefore,

 

where   (from outer inviscid problem) is used. Both   are not known apriori, but derived from matching conditions. The third equation is determine variation of outer pressure   due to the effect of viscosity. So there are only two parameters, which governs the flow, which are

 

then the boundary conditions become

 .

References

  1. ^ Moffatt, H. K., Kida, S., & Ohkitani, K. (1994). Stretched vortices–the sinews of turbulence; large-Reynolds-number asymptotics. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 259, 241-264.
  2. ^ Taylor, G. I. (1934). The formation of emulsions in definable fields of flow. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, containing papers of a mathematical and physical character, 146(858), 501-523.
  3. ^ Wang, C. Y. (1974). Axisymmetric stagnation flow on a cylinder. Quarterly of Applied Mathematics, 32(2), 207-213.
  4. ^ Craik, A. D. (2009). Exact vortex solutions of the Navier–Stokes equations with axisymmetric strain and suction or injection. Journal of fluid mechanics, 626, 291-306.
  5. ^ Rajamanickam, P., & Weiss, A. D. (2021). Steady axisymmetric vortices in radial stagnation flows. The Quarterly Journal of Mechanics and Applied Mathematics, 74(3), 367-378.
  6. ^ Rosenhead, Louis, ed. Laminar boundary layers. Clarendon Press, 1963.
  7. ^ Batchelor, George Keith. An introduction to fluid dynamics. Cambridge University Press, 2000.
  8. ^ Hiemenz, Karl. Die Grenzschicht an einem in den gleichförmigen Flüssigkeitsstrom eingetauchten geraden Kreiszylinder... Diss. 1911.
  9. ^ Howarth, Leslie. On the calculation of steady flow in the boundary layer near the surface of a cylinder in a stream. No. ARC-R/M-1632. AERONAUTICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM), 1934.
  10. ^ Drazin, Philip G., and Norman Riley. The Navier–Stokes equations: a classification of flows and exact solutions. No. 334. Cambridge University Press, 2006.
  11. ^ Rott, Nicholas. "Unsteady viscous flow in the vicinity of a stagnation point." Quarterly of Applied Mathematics 13.4 (1956): 444–451.
  12. ^ Stuart, J. T. "The viscous flow near a stagnation point when the external flow has uniform vorticity." Journal of the Aerospace Sciences (2012).
  13. ^ Tamada, Ko. "Two-dimensional stagnation-point flow impinging obliquely on a plane wall." Journal of the Physical Society of Japan 46 (1979): 310.
  14. ^ Dorrepaal, J. M. "An exact solution of the Navier–Stokes equation which describes non-orthogonal stagnation-point flow in two dimensions." Journal of Fluid Mechanics 163 (1986): 141–147.
  15. ^ Homann, Fritz. "Der Einfluss grosser Zähigkeit bei der Strömung um den Zylinder und um die Kugel." ZAMM‐Journal of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics/Zeitschrift für Angewandte Mathematik und Mechanik 16.3 (1936): 153–164.
  16. ^ Libby, Paul A. "Wall shear at a three-dimensional stagnation point with a moving wall." AIAA Journal 12.3 (1974): 408–409.
  17. ^ Libby, Paul A. "Laminar flow at a three-dimensional stagnation point with large rates of injection." AIAA Journal 14.9 (1976): 1273–1279.
  18. ^ Wang, C. Y. "Stagnation flow on the surface of a quiescent fluid—an exact solution of the Navier–Stokes equations." Quarterly of applied mathematics 43.2 (1985): 215–223.
  19. ^ Wang, C. Y. "Impinging stagnation flows." The Physics of fluids 30.3 (1987): 915–917.

stagnation, point, flow, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, this, article, large, number, grammatical, errors, please, help, improve, this, article, october, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, messa. This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is lt This article has a large number of grammatical errors gt Please help improve this article if you can October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In fluid dynamics stagnation point flow represents the flow of a fluid in the immediate neighborhood of a stagnation point or a stagnation line with which the stagnation point or the line is identified for a potential flow or inviscid flow The flow specifically considers a class of stagnation points known as saddle points where the incoming streamlines gets deflected and directed outwards in a different direction the streamline deflections are guided by separatrices The flow in the neighborhood of the stagnation point or line can generally be described using potential flow theory although viscous effects cannot be neglected if the stagnation point lies on a solid surface Contents 1 Stagnation point flow without solid surfaces 1 1 General three dimensional velocity field 1 1 1 Planar stagnation point flow 1 1 2 Axisymmetric stagnation point flow 1 2 Radial stagnation flows 2 Hiemenz flow 6 7 2 1 Stagnation point flow with a translating wall 10 2 2 Oblique stagnation point flow 3 Homann flow 4 Plane counterflows 5 ReferencesStagnation point flow without solid surfaces EditWhen two streams either of two dimensional or axisymmetric nature impinge on each other orthogonally a stagnation plane is created where the incoming streams are diverted tangentially outwards thus on the stagnation plane the velocity component normal to that plane is zero whereas the tangential component is non zero In the neighborhood of the stagnation point a local description for the velocity field can be described General three dimensional velocity field Edit The stagnation point flow corresponds to a linear dependence on the coordinates that can be described in the Cartesian coordinates x y z displaystyle x y z with velocity components v x v y v z displaystyle v x v y v z as follows v x a x v y b y v z g z displaystyle v x alpha x quad v y beta y quad v z gamma z where a b g displaystyle alpha beta gamma are constants referred as the strain rates these constants are not completely arbitrary since the continuity equation requires a b g 0 displaystyle alpha beta gamma 0 that is to say only two of the three constants are independent We shall assume g lt 0 a displaystyle gamma lt 0 leq alpha so that flow is towards the stagnation point in the z displaystyle z direction and away from the stagnation point in the x displaystyle x direction Without loss of generality one can assume that b a displaystyle beta geq alpha The flow field can be categorized into different types based on a single parameter 1 l a b a b displaystyle lambda frac alpha beta alpha beta Planar stagnation point flow Edit The two dimensional stagnation point flow belongs to the case b 0 l 1 displaystyle beta 0 lambda 1 The flow field is described as follows v x k x v z k z displaystyle v x kx quad v z kz where we let k a g gt 0 displaystyle k alpha gamma gt 0 This flow field is investigated as early as 1934 by G I Taylor 2 In the laboratory this flow field is created using a four mill apparatus although these flow fields are ubiquitous in turbulent flows Axisymmetric stagnation point flow Edit The axisymmetric stagnation point flow corresponds to a b l 0 displaystyle alpha beta lambda 0 The flow field can be simply described in cylindrical coordinate system r 8 z displaystyle r theta z with velocity components v r 0 v z displaystyle v r 0 v z as follows v r k r v z 2 k z displaystyle v r kr quad v z 2kz where we let k a b g 2 gt 0 displaystyle k alpha beta gamma 2 gt 0 Radial stagnation flows Edit In radial stagnation flows instead of a stagnation point we have a stagnation circle and the stagnation plane is replaced by a stagnation cylinder The radial stagnation flow is described using the cylindrical coordinate system r z displaystyle r z with velocity components v r v z displaystyle v r v z as follows 3 4 5 v r k r r s 2 r v z 2 k z displaystyle v r k left r frac r s 2 r right quad v z 2kz where r s displaystyle r s is the location of the stagnation cylinder Hiemenz flow 6 7 Edit Two dimensional stagnation point flow The flow due to the presence of a solid surface at z 0 displaystyle z 0 in planar stagnation point flow was described first by Karl Hiemenz in 1911 8 whose numerical computations for the solutions were improved later by Leslie Howarth 9 A familiar example where Hiemenz flow is applicable is the forward stagnation line that occurs in the flow over a circular cylinder The solid surface lies on the x y displaystyle xy According to potential flow theory the fluid motion described in terms of the stream function ps displaystyle psi and the velocity components v x 0 v z displaystyle v x 0 v z are given by ps k x z v x k x v z k z displaystyle psi kxz quad v x kx quad v z kz The stagnation line for this flow is x y z 0 y 0 displaystyle x y z 0 y 0 The velocity component v x displaystyle v x is non zero on the solid surface indicating that the above velocity field do not satisfy no slip boundary condition on the wall To find the velocity components that satisfy the no slip boundary condition one assumes the following form ps n k x F h h z n k displaystyle psi sqrt nu k xF eta quad eta frac z sqrt nu k where n displaystyle nu is the Kinematic viscosity and n k displaystyle sqrt nu k is the characteristic thickness where viscous effects are significant The existence of constant value for the viscous effects thickness is due to the competing balance between the fluid convection that is directed towards the solid surface and viscous diffusion that is directed away from the surface Thus the vorticity produced at the solid surface is able to diffuse only to distances of order n k displaystyle sqrt nu k analogous situations that resembles this behavior occurs in asymptotic suction profile and von Karman swirling flow The velocity components pressure and Navier Stokes equations then become v x k x F v z n k F p o p r 1 2 k 2 x 2 k n F 1 2 k n F 2 displaystyle v x kxF quad v z sqrt nu k F quad frac p o p rho frac 1 2 k 2 x 2 k nu F frac 1 2 k nu F 2 F F F F 2 1 0 displaystyle F FF F 2 1 0 The requirements that v x v z 0 0 displaystyle v x v z 0 0 at z 0 displaystyle z 0 and that v x k x displaystyle v x rightarrow kx as z displaystyle z rightarrow infty translate to F 0 0 F 0 0 F 1 displaystyle F 0 0 F 0 0 F infty 1 The condition for v z displaystyle v z as z displaystyle z rightarrow infty cannot be prescribed and is obtained as a part of the solution The problem formulated here is a special case of Falkner Skan boundary layer The solution can be obtained from numerical integrations and is shown in the figure The asymptotic behaviors for large h displaystyle eta rightarrow infty are F h 0 6479 v x k x v z k z d d 0 6479 d displaystyle F sim eta 0 6479 quad v x sim kx quad v z sim k z delta quad delta 0 6479 delta where d displaystyle delta is the displacement thickness Stagnation point flow with a translating wall 10 Edit Hiemenz flow when the solid wall translates with a constant velocity U displaystyle U along the x displaystyle x was solved by Rott 1956 11 This problem describes the flow in the neighbourhood of the forward stagnation line occurring in a flow over a rotating cylinder The required stream function is ps n k x F h U d 0 h G h d h displaystyle psi sqrt nu k xF eta U delta int 0 eta G eta d eta where the function G h displaystyle G eta satisfies G F G F G 0 G 0 1 G 0 displaystyle G FG F G 0 quad G 0 1 quad G infty 0 The solution to the above equation is given by G h F h F 0 displaystyle G eta F eta F 0 Oblique stagnation point flow Edit If the incoming stream is perpendicular to the stagnation line but approaches obliquely the outer flow is not potential but has a constant vorticity z o displaystyle zeta o The appropriate stream function for oblique stagnation point flow is given by ps k x z 1 2 z o z 2 displaystyle psi kxz frac 1 2 zeta o z 2 Viscous effects due to the presence of a solid wall was studied by Stuart 1959 12 Tamada 1979 13 and Dorrepaal 1986 14 In their approach the streamfunction takes the form ps n k x F h z o d 2 0 h H h d h displaystyle psi sqrt nu k xF eta zeta o delta 2 int 0 eta H eta d eta where the function H h displaystyle H eta H F H F H 0 H 0 0 H 1 displaystyle H FH F H 0 quad H 0 0 quad H infty 1 Homann flow Edit Homann flow with injection Homann flow with suction The solution for axisymmetric stagnation point flow in the presence of a solid wall was first obtained by Homann 1936 15 A typical example of this flow is the forward stagnation point appearing in a flow past a sphere Paul A Libby 1974 16 1976 17 extended Homann s work by allowing the solid wall to translate along its own plane with a constant speed and allowing constant suction or injection at the solid surface The solution for this problem is obtained in the cylindrical coorindate system r 8 z displaystyle r theta z by introducing h z n k g V 2 k n v r k r F h U cos 8 G h v 8 U sin 8 G h v z 2 k n F h displaystyle eta frac z sqrt nu k quad gamma frac V 2 sqrt k nu quad v r krF eta U cos theta G eta quad v theta U sin theta G eta quad v z 2 sqrt k nu F eta where U displaystyle U is the translational speed of the wall and V displaystyle V is the injection or suction velocity at the wall The problem is axisymmetric only when U 0 displaystyle U 0 The pressure is given by p p o r 1 2 k 2 r 2 2 k n F 2 F displaystyle frac p p o rho frac 1 2 k 2 r 2 2k nu F 2 F The Navier Stokes equations then reduce to F 2 F F F 2 1 0 G 2 F G F G 0 displaystyle begin aligned F 2FF F 2 1 amp 0 G 2FG F G amp 0 end aligned along with boundary conditions F 0 g F 0 0 F 1 G 0 1 G 0 displaystyle F 0 gamma quad F 0 0 quad F infty 1 quad G 0 1 quad G infty 0 When U V 0 displaystyle U V 0 the classical Homann problem is recovered Plane counterflows EditJets emerging from a slot jets creates stagnation point in between according to potential theory The flow near the stagnation point can by studied using self similar solution This setup is widely used in combustion experiments The initial study of impinging stagnation flows are due to C Y Wang 18 19 Let two fluids with constant properties denoted with suffix 1 top 2 bottom displaystyle 1 text top 2 text bottom flowing from opposite direction impinge and assume the two fluids are immiscible and the interface located at y 0 displaystyle y 0 is planar The velocity is given by u 1 k 1 x v 1 k 1 y u 2 k 2 x v 2 k 2 y displaystyle u 1 k 1 x quad v 1 k 1 y quad u 2 k 2 x quad v 2 k 2 y where k 1 k 2 displaystyle k 1 k 2 are strain rates of the fluids At the interface velocities tangential stress and pressure must be continuous Introducing the self similar transformation h 1 n 1 k 1 y u 1 k 1 x F 1 v 1 n 1 k 1 F 1 displaystyle eta 1 sqrt frac nu 1 k 1 y quad u 1 k 1 xF 1 quad v 1 sqrt nu 1 k 1 F 1 h 2 n 2 k 2 y u 2 k 2 x F 2 v 2 n 2 k 2 F 2 displaystyle eta 2 sqrt frac nu 2 k 2 y quad u 2 k 2 xF 2 quad v 2 sqrt nu 2 k 2 F 2 results equations F 1 F 1 F 1 F 1 2 1 0 p o 1 p 1 r 1 1 2 k 1 2 x 2 k 1 n 1 F 1 1 2 k 1 n 1 F 1 2 displaystyle F 1 F 1 F 1 F 1 2 1 0 quad frac p o1 p 1 rho 1 frac 1 2 k 1 2 x 2 k 1 nu 1 F 1 frac 1 2 k 1 nu 1 F 1 2 F 2 F 2 F 2 F 2 2 1 0 p o 2 p 2 r 2 1 2 k 2 2 x 2 k 2 n 2 F 2 1 2 k 2 n 2 F 2 2 displaystyle F 2 F 2 F 2 F 2 2 1 0 quad frac p o2 p 2 rho 2 frac 1 2 k 2 2 x 2 k 2 nu 2 F 2 frac 1 2 k 2 nu 2 F 2 2 The no penetration condition at the interface and free stream condition far away from the stagnation plane become F 1 0 0 F 1 1 F 2 0 0 F 2 1 displaystyle F 1 0 0 quad F 1 infty 1 quad F 2 0 0 quad F 2 infty 1 But the equations require two more boundary conditions At h 0 displaystyle eta 0 the tangential velocities u 1 u 2 displaystyle u 1 u 2 the tangential stress r 1 n 1 u 1 y r 2 n 2 u 2 y displaystyle rho 1 nu 1 partial u 1 partial y rho 2 nu 2 partial u 2 partial y and the pressure p 1 p 2 displaystyle p 1 p 2 are continuous Therefore k 1 F 1 0 k 2 F 2 0 r 1 n 1 k 1 3 F 1 0 r 2 n 2 k 2 3 F 2 0 p o 1 r 1 n 1 k 1 F 1 0 p o 2 r 2 n 2 k 2 F 2 0 displaystyle begin aligned k 1 F 1 0 amp k 2 F 2 0 rho 1 sqrt nu 1 k 1 3 F 1 0 amp rho 2 sqrt nu 2 k 2 3 F 2 0 p o1 rho 1 nu 1 k 1 F 1 0 amp p o2 rho 2 nu 2 k 2 F 2 0 end aligned where r 1 k 1 2 r 2 k 2 2 displaystyle rho 1 k 1 2 rho 2 k 2 2 from outer inviscid problem is used Both F i 0 F i 0 displaystyle F i 0 F i 0 are not known apriori but derived from matching conditions The third equation is determine variation of outer pressure p o 1 p o 2 displaystyle p o1 p o2 due to the effect of viscosity So there are only two parameters which governs the flow which are L k 1 k 2 r 2 r 1 1 2 G n 2 n 1 displaystyle Lambda frac k 1 k 2 left frac rho 2 rho 1 right 1 2 quad Gamma frac nu 2 nu 1 then the boundary conditions become F 1 0 L F 2 0 F 1 0 G L F 2 0 displaystyle F 1 0 Lambda F 2 0 quad F 1 0 sqrt frac Gamma Lambda F 2 0 References Edit Moffatt H K Kida S amp Ohkitani K 1994 Stretched vortices the sinews of turbulence large Reynolds number asymptotics Journal of Fluid Mechanics 259 241 264 Taylor G I 1934 The formation of emulsions in definable fields of flow Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series A containing papers of a mathematical and physical character 146 858 501 523 Wang C Y 1974 Axisymmetric stagnation flow on a cylinder Quarterly of Applied Mathematics 32 2 207 213 Craik A D 2009 Exact vortex solutions of the Navier Stokes equations with axisymmetric strain and suction or injection Journal of fluid mechanics 626 291 306 Rajamanickam P amp Weiss A D 2021 Steady axisymmetric vortices in radial stagnation flows The Quarterly Journal of Mechanics and Applied Mathematics 74 3 367 378 Rosenhead Louis ed Laminar boundary layers Clarendon Press 1963 Batchelor George Keith An introduction to fluid dynamics Cambridge University Press 2000 Hiemenz Karl Die Grenzschicht an einem in den gleichformigen Flussigkeitsstrom eingetauchten geraden Kreiszylinder Diss 1911 Howarth Leslie On the calculation of steady flow in the boundary layer near the surface of a cylinder in a stream No ARC R M 1632 AERONAUTICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL LONDON UNITED KINGDOM 1934 Drazin Philip G and Norman Riley The Navier Stokes equations a classification of flows and exact solutions No 334 Cambridge University Press 2006 Rott Nicholas Unsteady viscous flow in the vicinity of a stagnation point Quarterly of Applied Mathematics 13 4 1956 444 451 Stuart J T The viscous flow near a stagnation point when the external flow has uniform vorticity Journal of the Aerospace Sciences 2012 Tamada Ko Two dimensional stagnation point flow impinging obliquely on a plane wall Journal of the Physical Society of Japan 46 1979 310 Dorrepaal J M An exact solution of the Navier Stokes equation which describes non orthogonal stagnation point flow in two dimensions Journal of Fluid Mechanics 163 1986 141 147 Homann Fritz Der Einfluss grosser Zahigkeit bei der Stromung um den Zylinder und um die Kugel ZAMM Journal of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Mathematik und Mechanik 16 3 1936 153 164 Libby Paul A Wall shear at a three dimensional stagnation point with a moving wall AIAA Journal 12 3 1974 408 409 Libby Paul A Laminar flow at a three dimensional stagnation point with large rates of injection AIAA Journal 14 9 1976 1273 1279 Wang C Y Stagnation flow on the surface of a quiescent fluid an exact solution of the Navier Stokes equations Quarterly of applied mathematics 43 2 1985 215 223 Wang C Y Impinging stagnation flows The Physics of fluids 30 3 1987 915 917 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stagnation point flow amp oldid 1090021516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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