Introduction to Mathematical Fluid Dynamics (Dover Books on Physics) Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

Introduction to Mathematical Fluid Dynamics (Dover Books on Physics)

Price not available for France

You can still browse on Amazon. Try another country above.

Book Details
Publisher Dover Publications
ISBN / ASIN 0486615545
ISBN-13 9780486615547
Category Science
Marketplace France 🇫🇷
Ratings & Reviews No reviews yet — be the first!

No reviews yet.

Description

Fluid dynamics, the behavior of liquids and gases, is a field of broad impact — in physics, engineering, oceanography, and meteorology for example — yet full understanding demands fluency in higher mathematics, the only language fluid dynamics speaks. Dr. Richard Meyer's work is indeed introductory, while written for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in applied mathematics, engineering, and the physical sciences. A knowledge of calculus and vector analysis is presupposed.
The author develops basic concepts from a semi-axiomatic foundation, noting that "for mathematics students such a treatment helps to dispel the all too common impression that the whole subject is built on a quicksand of assorted intuitions." Contents include:
Kinematics: Lagrangian and Eulerian descriptions, Circulation and Vorticity.
Momentum Principle and Ideal Fluid: Conservation examples, Euler equations, D'Alembert's and Kelvin's theorems.
Newtonian Fluid: Constitutive and Kinetic theories, exact solutions.
Fluids of Small Viscosity: Singular Perturbation, Boundary Layers.
Some Aspects of Rotating Fluids: Rossby number, Ekman layer, Taylor-Proudman Blocking.
Some Effects of Compressibility: Thermodynamics, Waves, Shock relations and structure, Navier-Stokes equations.
Dr. Meyer writes, "This core of our knowledge concerns the relation between inviscid and viscous fluids, and the bulk of this book is devoted to a discussion of that relation."

Donate to EbookNetworking
Previous Book Fluid Mechanics: Problems a... Next Book Introduction to astrophysic...
Previous Fluid Mechanics: ...
Next Introduction to a...