Slow Viscous Flow

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

Leonardo wrote, “Mechanics is the paradise of the mathematical sciences, because by means of it one comes to the fruits of mathematics”; replace “Mechanics” by “Fluid mechanics” and here we are.
- From the Preface to the Second Edition

Although the exponential growth of computer power has advanced the importance of simulations and visualization tools for elaborating new models, designs and technologies, the discipline of fluid mechanics is still large, and turbulence in flows remains a challenging problem in classical physics. Like its predecessor, the revised and expanded Second Edition of this book addresses the basic principles of fluid mechanics and solves fluid flow problems where viscous effects are the dominant physical phenomena.

Much progress has occurred in the half a century that has passed since the edition of 1964. As predicted, aspects of hydrodynamics once considered offbeat have risen to importance. For example, the authors have worked on problems where variations in viscosity and surface tension cannot be ignored. The advent of nanotechnology has broadened interest in the hydrodynamics of thin films, and hydromagnetic effects and radiative heat transfer are routinely encountered in materials processing. This monograph develops the basic equations, in the three most important coordinate systems, in a way that makes it easy to incorporate these phenomena into the theory.

The book originally described by Prof. Langlois as "a monograph on theoretical hydrodynamics, written in the language of applied mathematics" offers much new coverage including the second principle of thermodynamics, the Boussinesq approximation, time dependent flows, Marangoni convection, Kovasznay flow, plane periodic solutions, Hele-Shaw cells, Stokeslets, rotlets, finite element methods, Wannier flow, corner eddies, and analysis of the Stokes operator.

Author(s): William E. Langlois, Michel O. Deville (auth.)
Edition: 2
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Year: 2014

Language: English
Pages: 324
Tags: Approximations and Expansions; Applications of Mathematics; Computational Mathematics and Numerical Analysis; Computational Science and Engineering; Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics

Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Cartesian Tensors....Pages 1-18
The Equations of Viscous Flow....Pages 19-79
Curvilinear Coordinates....Pages 81-104
Exact Solutions to the Equations of Viscous Flow....Pages 105-143
Pipe Flow....Pages 145-157
Flow Past a Sphere....Pages 159-182
Plane Flow....Pages 183-211
Rotary Flow....Pages 213-228
Lubrication Theory....Pages 229-249
Introduction to the Finite Element Method....Pages 251-270
Variational Principle, Weak Formulation and Finite Elements....Pages 271-292
Stokes Flow and Corner Eddies....Pages 293-305
Back Matter....Pages 307-324