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L
SECOND EDITION
PIJUSH K. KUNDU
0
IRA
M.
COHEN
Fluid Mechanics,Second
Edition
Founders
of
Modern Fluid Dynamics
Ludwig Prandtl
(1875-1953)
G.
I.
Taylor
(18861975)
(Biographical
sketches
of
Prandtl
and
Taylor
are
given in Appendix
C.)
Photograph
of
Ludwig Prandtl is reprinted with permission
from
the
Annual Review
of
Fluid
Mechanics,
Vol.
19, Copyright 1987 by
Annual
Reviews www.AnnualReviews.org.
Photograph
of
Geoffrey
Ingram
Taylor at age 69
in
his laboratory
reprinted
with permission
from
the
AIP
Emilio
See
Visual
Archieves. Copyright, American Institute
of
Physics,
2000.
Fluid
Mechanics
Second
Edition
Rjucsh
K.
Kundu
Oceanographic Center
Nova
Universily
Dmiu. Florida
Ira
M.
Cohen
Departnient
of
Mechanicid En.gineering and
Applied Meclurnics
Universiry
of
Pennsylvania
Philadelphici, Pennsylvania
with
a
chapter
on
Computational
Fluid
Dynamics
by
Howard
H.
Hu
ACADEMIC
PRESS
A HarcourL Sciencc and Technology Company
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Diego
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York
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Coverphoto:
Karman
vortex
street
behind a ckular cylindcr at
R
=
1
OS.
Photograph
by Sadatoshi Taneda
Coverphoto:
Karmnn
vortex
street
behind a circular cylinder at
R
=
140. Photograph
by Snd;ltoshi Taneda
This
book
is printcd
on
acid-frcc
paper.
@
Copyright
02002,1990
by
Elsevier
Science
(USA).
All Rights
Reserved.
No
part
of
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Catalog
Card
Numbcr: 2001086884
International Standard
RookNumber:
0-12-1782514
PRIMED
m-
THE
=D
STATES
OF
AMERICA
02
03
04
Hp
9
8
7 6 5 4
3
2
The second
edition
is dedicated
to the memory
of
pijush
K.
Kundu and
also
to
my
wife
Linda
and
daughters
Susan
and
Nancy
who
have greatly
enriched
my
life.
“Everything
should
be made
as
simple
as possible,
but not simpler.”
-Albert
Einstein
“Ifnature were not beauhB1, it
would
not be
worth
studying it.
And
life
would
not be
worth
living ”
-Henry
Poincad
In
memory
of
Pijush
Kundu
Pijush Kanti Kundu was born in Calcutta,
India, on October
31, 1941.
He received a
B.S.
degree
in Mechanical Engineering in
1963
from Shibpur Engineering College of
Calcutta University, earned an M.S. degree
in Engineering from Roorkee University in
1965,
and was a lecturer in Mechanical Engi-
neering at the Indian Institute of Technology
in Delhi from
1965
to
1968.
Pijush came to
the United States in
1968,
as a doctoral stu-
dent at Penn State University. With Dr. John
L. Lumley as his advisor, he studied instabili-
ties of viscoelastic fluids, receiving his doctor-
ate in
1972.
He began his lifelong interest in
oceanography soon after his graduation, working
as
Research Associate in Oceanog-
raphy at Oregon State University from
1968
until
1972.
After spending a year at the
University de Oriente in Venezuela, he joined the faculty of the Oceanographic Center
of Nova Southeastern University, where he remained until his death in
1994.
During his career, Pijush contributed to a number of sub-disciplines in physical
oceanography, most notably in the fields of coastal dynamics, mixed-layer physics,
internal waves, and Indian-Ocean dynamics. He was a skilled data analyst, and, in
this
regard, one of his accomplishments was to introduce the “empirical orthogonal
eigenfunction” statistical technique to the oceanographic community.
I
arrived at Nova Southeastern University shortly after Pijush, and he and
I
worked
closely together thereafter. I was immediately impressed with the clarity of his scien-
tific thinking and his thoroughness.
His
most impressive and obvious quality, though,
was his love of science, which pervaded
all
his activities. Some time after we met,
Pijush opened a drawer in a desk in his home office, showing me drafts of several
chapters to a book he had always wanted to write. A decade later, this manuscript
became the first edition of “Fluid Mechanics,” the culmination of his lifelong dream;
which he dedicated to the memory of his mother, and to his wife Shikha, daughter
Tonushree, and son Joydip.
Julian P. McCreary, Jr.,
University of Hawaii
Contents
Preface
xvii
Preface
to
First
Edition
xix
Author’s
Notes
xxiz
~~huplt?r
1
1.n
troduction
1
2
1.
Fluid Mechanics
2.
Units
of
Measurement.
3.
Solids, Liquids, and
Gases.
3
4.
Continuum Hypothesis
4
5.
Transport Phmomena
6.
Surfacc
Tension
7.
FluidStatics
9
8.
Classical Thcrmodynamics
12
9.
Perfcct:
Gas
10.
Static Equilibrium
of
a
Compressible Medium
17
Exercises
22
Literature Cited
23
Supplemcntal Reading
23
5
8
16
Uiqter
2
(lartcsian
X:nsors
1.
ScalarsandVeclors
24
2.
Rotation
of
Axes: Formal Dcfinition
of
a Vector
25
vi
i
[...]... between Infinitely Decp Fluids 16 Waves in a Finitc Layer Overlying an Infinitely Deep Fluid 17 Shallow Layer Overlying an Inhitcly Deep Fluid 18 Equations of Motion for a Continuously Stratified Fluid 19 Internal Wavcs in a Continuously Stratificd Fluid 20 Dispersion of Jntcrnal Wavcs in a Stratified Fluid 21 Encrgy Considerations of Internal Wavcs in a Stratified Fluid Exercises Litcrature... Litemium CiM 23 Supp/ernmLd R(!udirig 23 I lluid MechanicsFluidmechanics deals with the flow of fluids Its study is important to physicists, whosc main interest is in understanding phcnomena They may, for example, be interested in learning what causcs the various typcs of wave phenomena in the atmosphere and in the ocean, why a layer of fluid hcated from below brcaks up into cellular patterns,... thc reader can follow up with specialized texts for a more comprehcnsive understanding An historical survey of fluid mcchanics from thc time of Archimedes (ca 250 B.C.E.) to approximately 1900 is provided in the Eleventh Edition of 7;he Encyclopmliu Britunnicu (1910) in Vol XIV (under “Hydromechanics,” pp 115-135) 1 am grateful to Professor Hcrrnan Gluck (Professor of Mathematics at the University of... computational fluid dynamics, graciously provided an cntircly new chapter, Chapter 1 1, thcrchy providing the student with an entree into this cxploding new field Both finite diffcrcncc and Gnite element methods arc introduced and a delailed worked-out cxamplc of each is provided 1 have becn a studcnt 01 fluidmechanics since 1954 when I entered college to study aeronauticalengineering I have been teaching fluid. .. from below brcaks up into cellular patterns, why a tcnnis ball hit with “top spin” dips rather sharply, how fish swim, and bow birds fly The study or fluidmechanics is just as important to engjneers, whose main interest is in the applications of fluidmechanics io solve industrial problems Aerospace engineers may be intcrcsted in designing airplanes that have low resistance and, at thc same time, high... interested in designing turbines, heat cxchangers, and fluid cou2l ings Chemical enginccrs may be intcrested in designing efficient devices to mix industrial chemicals The objectivcs of physicists and enginccrs, howevcr, are 1 not quite separable because the engineers need to understand and thc physicists need to be rnotivatcd through applications Fluidmechanics, like the study of any other branch of science,... withdrawn In contrast, a fluid de€orms Figme 11 Dclormtrlionof solid and fluid clcmcnts: (a) solid; and (b) tluid continuously under the action of a shear force, however small Thus, the clement of the fluid ABCD confined between parallel plates (Figure l.lb) deforms to shapes such as ABC’D’ and Al3C”D” as long as h e force F is maintained on the upper plate Therefore, wc say that a fluid flows The qualification... stress in the fluid, just as the drag cxperienced by the two trains results from the momentum exchangc through the transfer or coal particles Thc fluid above AB tends to push the fluid underneath forward, whereas the fluid below AB tends to drag tbe uppcr fluid backward Experiments show that the magnitude of the shear stress 7 along a surface such as AB is, io a good approximation,related to thc velocity... trcatcd and discusscd in this kxt This second cdition also contains additional material on slreamfunctions,boundary condilions, viscous flows, boundary layers, jets, and compressible flows Most important, there is an entirely ncw chapter on computationalfluid dynamicsthat introduces the student to the various tcchuiques for numerically integrating the cquations governing fluid motions HopcFully the introduction... forward to working with Yijush on the second edition after my term as department chainnan ended in mid-1997 For the next year and a half, howcvcr, scrious family health problems detoured any plans Discussions on this cdition resumed in July ol 1999 and wcrc concludcd in the Spring or 2000 when my work really started This hook remains thc principal work product of Pijush K Kundu, especially the lengthy chapters . L
SECOND EDITION
PIJUSH K. KUNDU
0
IRA
M.
COHEN
Fluid Mechanics, Second
Edition
Founders
of
Modern Fluid Dynamics
Ludwig. Copyright, American Institute
of
Physics,
2000.
Fluid
Mechanics
Second
Edition
Rjucsh
K.
Kundu
Oceanographic Center
Nova
Universily
Dmiu.